the daily cardinal - spring welcome issue 2010

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“…the great state University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.” University of Wisconsin-Madison Complete campus coverage since 1892 dailycardinal.com Spring Welcome Issue 2010 l RESEARCH SPARKS DEBATE ON ANIMAL TESTING An examination of UW-Madison’s primate research labs and their policies A closer look at the man behind Madison’s new grocery and the food on its shelves. LIFE AND STYLE PAGE 8 l FEATURES PAGE 9 l GRAPHIC BY NATASHA SOGLIN / THE DAILY CARDINAL

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Page 1: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

“…the great state University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.”

University of Wisconsin-Madison Complete campus coverage since 1892 dailycardinal.com Spring Welcome Issue 2010l

RESEARCH SPARKS DEBATE ON ANIMAL TESTINGAn examination of UW-Madison’s primate research labs and their policies

A closer look at the man behind Madison’s new grocery and the food on its shelves.

LIFE AND STYLE PAGE 8l FEATURES PAGE 9l

GRAPHIC BY NATASHA SOGLIN / The DAILY CARDINAL

Page 2: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

page two

Corrections or clarifi cations? Call The Daily Cardinal offi ce at 608-262-8000 or send an e-mail to [email protected].

For the record

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An independent student newspaper, serving the University of Wisconsin-Madison

community since 1892

Volume 119, Issue 682142 Vilas Communication Hall

821 University AvenueMadison, Wis., 53706-1497

(608) 262-8000 l fax (608) 262-8100

News and [email protected]

Editor in Chief Charles BraceManaging Editor Ryan HebelCampus Editor Kelsey GundersonCity Editor Grace UrbanState Editor Hannah Furfaro Enterprise Editor Hannah McClungAssociate News Editor Ashley DavisSenior News Reporters Ariel Shapiro

Robert TaylorOpinion Editors Anthony Cefali

Todd StevensEditorial Board Editor Jamie StarkArts Editors Katie Foran-McHale

Jacqueline O’ReillySports Editors Scott Kellogg

Nico SavidgeAlmanac Editor Kevin SlaneFeatures Editor Madeline AndersonLife & Style Editor Ben PiersonPhoto Editors Isabel Alvarez

Danny MarchewkaGraphics Editors Caitlin Kirihara

Natasha SoglinMultimedia Editor Jenny PeekCopy Chiefs Anna Jeon

Kyle SparksJustin Stephani

Jake VictorCopy Editors Ben Breiner

Business and [email protected]

Business Manager Cole WenzelAdvertising Manager Katie BrownBilling Manager Mindy CummingsSenior Account Executive Ana DevcicAccount Executives Mara Greenwald

Kristen Lindsay, D.J. Nogalski, Jordan Rossman Sarah Schupanitz

Online Account Executive Tom ShieldGraphic Designer Mara GreenwaldWeb Director Eric HarrisMarketing Director Mia BeesonArchivist Erin Schmidtke

The Daily Cardinal is published weekdays and distributed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and its surrounding community with a circulation of 10,000.

The Daily Cardinal is a nonprofi t organization run by its staff members and elected editors. It receives no funds from the university. Operating revenue is generated from advertising and subscription sales.

Capital Newspapers, Inc. is the Cardinal’s printer. The Daily Cardinal is printed on recycled paper. The Cardinal is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Wisconsin Newspaper Association.

All copy, photographs and graphics appearing in The Daily Cardinal are the sole property of the Cardinal and may not be reproduced without written permission of the editor in chief.

The Daily Cardinal accepts advertising representing a wide range of views. This acceptance does not imply agreement with the views expressed. The Cardinal reserves the right to reject advertisements judged offensive based on imagery, wording or both.

Complaints: News and editorial complaints should be presented to the editor in chief. Business and advertising complaints should be presented to the business manager.

Letters Policy: Letters must be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 200 words, including contact informa-tion. Letters may be sent to [email protected].

© 2010, The Daily Cardinal Media CorporationISSN 0011-5398

UW to invest in weed-powered campus

D ays before the spring 2010 session resumed, Chancellor Biddy Martin

announced that UW-Madison is well on its way to implementing the quarter system—that is, a quarter ounce of marijuana per student per week. These radical, or more com-monly, “rad” changes were institut-ed during the yearly UW-Madison conservation summit, whose date happened to coincide with that of the Great Midwest Marijuana Harvest Festival last October. According to Jacob “Gnar” Narford, spokesdude for the Weed Conserve program, the committee decided after what seemed like an eternity in a small, windowless room with ambient lighting to disregard nearly all prior conservation methods.

“It was like, in with the old, out with the new,” said Narford.

“Haha! I meant the total opposite. Dude! Anyway, we realized that a ton of those UW-Madison kiddos are lifelong citizens of Blaze-Town anyway, so why not just run with that?” Narford strongly believes these so-called “super toker” students are the ones who are most concerned with the environment, especially in matters that directly involve getting more weed from the aforementioned environment. Their lifestyle, notori-ously low in energy and resource demand and consumption, is a model for the new conservation pro-gram that is to be implemented as soon as its forerunners catch up on their car payments.

The Weed Conserve program, as a part of the Wisconsin Hi-dea, will rely on marijuana-smoking lifestyles and value systems to reduce waste and consumption all across campus. In a unanimous vote, the committee agreed to relocate the campus hub to the Eagle Heights/Picnic Point area and hold all classes outdoors during the warmer months of the year. In the wintertime, professors and TAs are to host life-changing discussions and

drum circles in their own homes.In accordance with the original

goal of using effi cient systems, aban-doned campus buildings are to be used as electricity- and water-free student co-ops, with the exception of powering vaporizers and refi lling bong water. As the heaviest of mari-juana smokers know, the best place to shower is a free-standing body of water, so Lake Mendota is to be used for exactly that purpose until it freezes over.

UW-Madison’s curriculum is to undergo vast changes as well. Although most departments within the various schools will remain, a large piece of the budget will be dedicated to funding the future Department of Glassblowing as a larger part of the College of Gen-Eds. Formerly the College of Letters and Science, the creation of the College of Gen-Eds is a holistic approach to providing stoners with the education they would probably end up getting anyway.

“Knowing that most potheads are just like, ‘peace’ to the UW for good after their second year, we wanted

to be sure that no one would even dream of dropping out with these new changes,” Narford said. “The only way we can keep these energy-effi -cient bros here is to offer courses like ‘Jam Band Appreciation,’ ‘Dependent Living’ and ‘The Big Lebowski 101.’ I mean, dude, who the fuck would give up a course load like that?”

When asked about the fi nanc-ing of the Weed Conserve program, Narford admitted he didn’t think that far into the future, but he knows a guy who owes him a shit-ton of money, so that should cover at least some or maybe a lot of the program. He is encouraging UW students, fac-ulty and staff to “just chill” and let him handle it.

Dude! If you have any ideas for making the Weed Conserve program even more kick-ass, just drop me a line at [email protected]. If I don’t respond, it’s because I had a revelation that my brain controls my like, invol-untary movements and I totally freaked the fl ip out and thought I wasn’t breath-ing and my friends had to like, call the ambulance again. Don’t worry, it happens a lot.

ERIN KAY VAN PAYhail to the vp

2 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/page-two

Editorial BoardCharles Brace Anthony Cefali

Kathy Dittrich Nico Savidge Jamie StarkTodd Stevens Justin Stephani

Board of Directors Vince Filak Alex Kusters

Joan Herzing Jason Stein Jeff Smoller Janet Larson Chris Long Charles Brace

Katie Brown Benjamin Sayre Jenny Sereno Terry Shelton

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Spring 2010 Recruitment Meeting

January 29th Where: 2195 Vilas Hall

When: 4:00 p.m.Report for campus, city and state news

Take photos of campus events, Badger athletics, concerts and more

Write music or movie reviews and cover local Madison entertainment

Comment on or critique today’s politics

Cover your favorite Badger sports team

Write in depth features covering food, science and student life

Create compelling graphics, political cartoons or comics

Perfect your AP Style and grammar skills as a copy editor

Design, code, blog or report for dailycardinal.com

Any questions? Send them to [email protected]

TODAY:partly sunnyhi 29º / lo 15º

WEDNESDAY:partly sunnyhi 31º / lo 16º

Page 3: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

newsdailycardinal.com/news Spring Welcome Issue 2010 3l

Signature moves

Danny marchewka/the daIly cardInal

U.S. Olympic Women’s Ice hockey team members Molly engston, Jessie Vetter and Jinelle Zaugg-Siergiej sign tee-shirts and autographs at the Kohl center on Jan. 4.

edgewater hotel vote delayed until Feb. 23By Grace Urbanthe daIly cardInal

After a lengthy battle with the city of Madison, the fate of Hammes Co.’s Edgewater Hotel redevelopment proposal will be decided at the Madison Common Council meeting Feb. 23.

The new development fol-lows a Dec. 15 meeting in which the Common Council voted to uphold the Landmarks Commission decision to deny a certificate of appropriateness to the developer.

The council, which has never overturned a Landmarks Commission decision, needed a 14-vote supermajority of 20 members to overturn the com-mission and grant the appeal.

After hearing statements from and asking questions of Hammes Co. President Robert Dunn, Landmarks Commission member Stu Levitan and over 40 citizens who had registered to speak, 12 voted to overturn while five voted against the proposal. Three coun-cil members were absent.

Citizens spoke to the impor-tance of job creation in addition

to the importance of preserving the neighborhood.

Due to the language of the landmarks ordinance, committee members were required to base their decision on whether or not “special conditions of the proper-ty created constraints that caused serious hardships for the owner, which were not self-created.”

Many council members, including Ald. Lauren Cnare, District 3, whose proposal to delay the vote on the Hammes Co. appeal was not supported by the council, expressed their sincere hope that the developer would be able to go back to the drawing board and meet the requirements of the landmarks ordinance.

“I want this project to happen; every single person in this room wants this project to happen,” Ald. Brian Solomon, District 10, said.

However, there is no certain-ty that this will be the case. According to Dunn, “it will com-pletely undermine the financial

Engineering students return home safely after working in HaitiBy kelsey Gundersonthe daIly cardInal

Five UW-Madison engineering students and an advisor returned home safely Saturday after working in Haiti when the earthquake hit.

The students, who are part of the UW-Madison program Engineers Without Borders, were working to fix a broken pipe that provides clean drinking water in Bayonnais, a rural village located about 70 miles north of Port-au-Prince.

Eyleen Chou, a fifth year mechan-ical engineering student and one of the students working in Haiti at the time, said the group felt a small shake when the earthquake hit. It wasn’t until they began checking their e-mails later in the evening that they realized how severe the damage was.

“We were really concerned because Port-au-Prince is the main artery for the whole country,” she said. “All of the really good hospitals, universities and government build-

ings are centered there.”Chou said the group was in Haiti

from Jan. 9-14 and their travel plans were altered drastically because of the earthquake. She said they had to re-route their flight back home in order to avoid flying out of Port au Prince.

Although Chou said she is happy her and her classmates were able to return safely, she stresses the impor-tance of working to help the people

Task Force finds racial disparities in Dane county criminal justice system among worst in nationPart one of two in a series regarding racial disparities in dane countyBy allison Geyerthe daIly cardInal

The city of Madison is proud of its history as a progressive commu-nity of forward-thinking individuals. Consistently ranked favorably as a pos-itive place to raise a family, Madison boasts an overall high standard of liv-ing and high level of education.

However, Madison resides in Dane County, which has one of the highest racial disparities of incarcera-tion in the nation with “over 50 percent of young African American males either in prison, on probation or on extended supervision” accord-ing to county reports. In 2008’s “Ten Worst Places to be Black” report by The Black Commentator, an online weekly publication, Wisconsin ranked number one.

In response to these disparities, the Dane County Equal Opportunities Commission worked with County Executive Kathleen Falk and County Board Chair Scott McDonell to appoint the Dane County Task Force on Racial Disparities in the Criminal Justice System in 2008. The Task Force released their report and rec-ommendations to the public in the fall of 2009.

Racial disparity is defined as a “statistical pattern of racial or ethnic difference at a particular point in the criminal justice system,” according to

county reports.If a black/white racial disparity of

10 occurs, then blacks in that area are 10 times more likely to be incarcerated for a particular offense than whites are. The existence of a racial disparity indi-cates that there is a problem within the criminal justice system which can be more clearly identified and specified by further statistical analysis.

During the period between 1999 and 2002, Dane County had arrest disparities ranging on average between 10 and 30, according to the Task Force.

“Blacks in Dane County were

roughly 100 times more likely to be imprisoned on a drug sentence than whites—the second highest disparity in the nation (down from 150 earlier in the 1990s when Dane County was the highest); and about 23 times more likely to be sentenced for a non-drug offense, the nation’s highest,” the report stated.

Several factors contribute to a level of racial disparity that has reached “crisis proportions” in Dane County, as described by the Task Force report. But

Fresh madison market focuses of fresh and healthy food alternativesBy anna Discherthe daIly cardInal

Fresh Madison Market opened Saturday, Jan. 9 in University Square as a new way for students on the UW-Madison campus to get groceries.

Jeff Maurer, owner of Fresh Madison Market said he thinks the new addition will provide students with healthier choices on campus.

“I think it will be a very positive impact because of the amount of fresh food that we have available and providing a very fresh, healthy alternative to what people in the downtown have been able to get, more con-veniently or more readily.”

Maurer said because the store is independently owned, they’re able to make a lot of decisions at the store level, providing custom-ers with what they want.

“Today I had a customer that

wanted a particular item and I was literally able to pull out a catalogue and show them the item and the item has now been ordered,” Maurer said. “I will have it in the next couple of days for that customer.”

Planning, negotiating and construction for Fresh Market Madison began in January 2009. Maurer said they chose University Square for the location because it is in the center of the UW-Madison campus.

“Based upon … sales so far, it appears as though [customers] appreciate the produce, the deli, the sushi, all those departments that are very fresh, and I’d like to think healthier than some of the alternatives,” he said.

Maurer also said he hopes Fresh Madison Market’s customer base is “about 50 percent students and 50 percent non-students, that’s our goal.”

kyle BUrsaw/the daIly cardInal

customers inspect fresh produce at newly opened Fresh Madison Market. the grocery store is located in University Square.

edgewater page 5

haiti page 5

race page 5

naTasha soGlin/the daIly cardInal

Page 4: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

news4 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/newsl

UW professors offer online solution to lower textbook costsBy Hannah McClungThe DaIly CarDInal

Online resources for class content may be a solution for long lines and substantial price tags at campus-area bookstores, but returning students this semester have a wide variety of choices to fight textbook costs.

Factors for putting class resourc-es online include the environment, lower cost and the convenience for both students and professors. The main reason the UW School of Veterinary Sciences Department of Surgical Sciences put most con-tent online this semester was the economic benefits for students, Department Secretary Sue Genske said.

According to Genske, it is easier and more affordable for students to have things online because the resources can be detailed in color and the students can watch small informational movies.

“Student response [to online textbooks] has not been overwhelm-ing, most students probably tolerate e-books,” said University Bookstore Textbook Manager Steve Scheibl.

According to Scheibl online textbooks and regular textbooks ultimately cost the same because, although e-books are cheaper, you cannot sell them back.

For course readers, prices gen-

Caitlin KiRiHaRa/The DaIly CarDInal

loRenzo zeMella/The DaIly CarDInal

Segredo, a boutique bowling alley and restaurant owned by Michael hierl, now occupies the space formerly occupied by Madison avenue. It features a variety of food and beverages in addition to bowling lanes.

Restaurant and boutique bowling alley Segredo opens, replaces Madison AvenueBy Beth PickhardThe DaIly CarDInal

New entertainment options are now being offered to students downtown at Segredo, a combina-tion restaurant, bar, bowling alley and gaming center.

The venue is located on University Avenue and takes the place of Madison Avenue, which closed because of underage drink-ing and safety concerns.

Segredo boasts that it is more than a bar and serves a vari-ety of food and beverages. The menu includes unique items like shrimp tacos and highlights a selection of cocktails and “mock-tails,” some of which are made with Babcock ice cream.

Segredo’s owner, Michael Hierl, believes entertainment offerings will make Segredo a popular arena.

Huge televisions air sports games and screen music videos during DJ performances. Patrons can play Nintendo Wii, Brazilian sports bar games or go boutique bowling.

Hierl said Segredo is one of the few establishments that offer boutique-bowling lanes in the country. Boutique bowling uses shorter lanes, but otherwise is like its full-sized counterpart.

“This is the first boutique bowl-ing setting in a lounge. Buildings are usually three to four times the size [of ours],” he said.

Segredo not only targets stu-dents, but also young professionals and families on weekends. Hierl said Segredo accommodates fami-lies and diners who may want to come earlier by opening their doors at four on weekdays and earlier on weekends.

According to Hierl, entertain-ment options and dining allow Segredo to have steady business from dinner to bar time.

“Instead of one late night turn, a big rush between mid-night and bar time, we have three turns [during evenings] … games and entertainment will also attract more people than before,” he said.

Heirl said Segredo aims to establish a respectful environment. The first house rule is “be good or be gone.”

“You can’t have fun and enjoy food, games and entertainment unless you are in a safe environ-ment,” Hierl said.

Hierl has already received offers for new venues in other areas of the country and would like to expand to other cities much like Madison.

Plans for the expansion of Human ecology building call for demolition of historic Home Management HouseBy Mark BennettThe DaIly CarDInal

A campus building with one of the most unknown histories at UW-Madison is set to be demolished within the next month.

The building, located on Linden Street between Agricultural Hall and the Human Ecology build-ing, served as a practice home for women in the UW-Madison Home Economics program for nearly three decades.

This month, the School of Human

Ecology begins their renovation and expansion. As part of this project, the Home Management House is sched-uled to be torn down soon.

According to Judy Pasch, a UW-Madison graduate and former lecturer in the Consumer Science Department, women studying the art of home care were required to live in and maintain this home for two weeks with a group of fellow classmates.

Pasch said the coursework for the women consisted of chemistry, bacte-riology, linguistic studies and technical

topics on foods, textiles, architecture and household management.

These women also learned the responsibility of keeping the home clean and presentable, as well as the proper ways in which to entertain guests and dignitaries.

According to Pasch, the roles in the home were crucial to daily life at the time, and home care was seen as a profession.

“It was expected that women

Kyle BURsaW/The DaIly CarDInal

The home Management house, which served as a learning tool for students in the School of human ecology for over three decades is scheduled to be demolished within the next month.

Board of Regents calls special meeting, presents H1n1 update and approves UW-Milwaukee projectsBy Kelsey Gunderson and Hannah FurfaroThe DaIly CarDInal

University Health Services Director Dr. Sarah Van Orman pro-vided a campus H1N1 virus fall semester recap and update at a Board of Regents meeting held January 8.

Although Van Orman said she does not like to make predictions about the flu, she said another H1N1 outbreak could occur early on in the semester.

“It is possible that there could be a third peak of activity at the beginning of the spring semester when we once again have those large numbers of students arriving on our campus,” she said.

Van Orman also said that although there were two peaks during the semester when large numbers of students were seeking medical help for the virus, she said she feels the UW System cam-puses handled the outbreak well, emphasizing the need for open communication in the future.

“People on campus want to know what is going on and they want to know what the campus is doing about it, so providing clear, comprehensive communications is very, very important,” she said.

According to Van Orman, the H1N1 vaccine poses the biggest challenge going into the spring semester.

She said the vaccine first arrived

in small amounts, and UHS was able to vaccinate only about 6,000 students during the fall semester, when she would prefer that num-ber were closer to 20,000.

Van Orman said the good news about the H1N1 virus is that the severity has remained fairly low and she still emphasizes the importance of good hygiene and self-isolation to stop the virus from spreading.

At the meeting, the Regents also discussed and approved three capi-tal initiatives for UW-Milwaukee in an effort to expand research activity across the UW System.

The investments will go toward improving or replacing three exist-ing research initiatives including the redevelopment of Columbia St. Mary’s Hospital.

Regent David Walsh said both UW-Madison Chancellor Biddy Martin and former UW-Madison Chancellor John Riley support the UW-Milwaukee research funding.

“There’s clearly room [for more competition],” he said in a state-ment. “The key is it’s good for Wisconsin, and it’s especially good for southeast Wisconsin to gener-ate whatever research we can in that part of the state.”

According to the statement, out of the initial $240 million in funding for UW-Milwaukee’s ini-tiative, $64 million is still available for future research projects.

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Page 5: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

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SAFERide cab limits student use to six times per semester

As of Jan. 2, UW-Madison stu-dents are limited to six SAFERide cab uses per semester, down from the previous allowance of four per month.

According to a UW-Madison release, the change was made in an attempt to deter students from using SAFERide cab as free night-time transportation, rather than for emergencies only, which is the service’s intended use.

The release said the service is

funded entirely by student-segre-gated fees and is unable to afford recent increases in costs partly due to non-emergency use.

“The SAFEride cab program is intended to be used only in the case of emergencies,” Michael Romenesko, a member of the Associated Students of Madison committee that advises student-financed transportation ser-vices, said in a statement. “We’ve seen a pattern of a very small number

of students, fewer than 200, using SAFEride cab very frequently.”

UW-Madison officials still urge students to use SAFERide cab in case of an emergency, but to also take advantage of other transportation options available like the SAFERide bus system, walking with friends or calling their own cabs.

For more information visit: asm.wisc.edu/SAFEride.html.

—Kelsey Gunderson

JAcob ElA/the daIly cardInal

Students are now limited to six SaFeride cab uses per semester, down from four per month, in an attempt to deter students from using the service for non-emergency situations.

Capitol receives bomb threat, no bomb found

A bomb threat caused an evacu-ation of the state Capitol Dec. 29.

At approximately 3 p.m. the Dane County 911 Center received a bomb threat and ordered the evacuation of all Capitol employ-ees and visitors, Department of Administration spokesperson Emily Winecke said.

The Dane County K-9 unit and Capitol police searched the building for a man with a sus-picious looking bag but found

nothing, an Associated Press report said.

According to Winecke, once offi-cials determined the building was clear of threats, the Capitol reopened at 4 p.m. for employees only.

Full public access to the Capitol resumed at 8 a.m. the following day.

Winecke said Gov. Jim Doyle was not in the Capitol at the time of the evacuation.

—Jessica Feld

viability of the project if the designs are altered.”

He added, “the great irony in this whole project is the path to preservation is from the redevel-opment; that’s what gets us the public terrace and the redesign of the 1940s building. If we leave it, this building will continue to deteriorate.”

The Landmarks Commission had voted 5-2 to deny the certificate of appropriateness because the tower is not com-patible with buildings in a 200-foot radius.

Hammes Co. appealed the decision to the council with the argument that the commission did not consider the purpose of the landmarks ordinance, which refers to preserving and enhancing the city’s cultural, social, economic, political and architectural history.

Ald. Bridget Maniaci, District

2, the lone alder on the Landmarks Commission, moved to accept the appeal because she felt there is great public interest in preserving the property, in addition to the fact that hardships were caused for the owner.

Soloman, conversely, said he did not think the council had proved Dunn would have to endure sufficient hardship if he changed the plans.

Despite a conflicted council and public, the fight is not over. Ald. Michael Schumacher, District 18, who was not present at the December 15 meeting, asked for reconsideration of the project.

At the January 5 meeting, the council unanimously voted to delay their decision on whether or not to overturn the Landmarks Commission decision until February 23 so the city’s Plan and Urban Design commissions can review the project ad make recommendations.

edgewater from page 3

in Haiti.“We’re not the people to worry

about” she said. “We need to focus on the people of Haiti.”

According to Chou, students can help by donating to the many relief organizations available.

She said, however, that regardless

of the amount of money and supplies donated, Americans will never under-stand the true severity of the situation.

“As Americans, we can live in this bubble and see all the damage, death, and despair, but be removed from it where it does not affect us on a regular basis,” she said. “People need to understand that Haiti will be forever affected by this

catastrophe.”Students can visit http://www.

interaction.org/crisis-list/earth-quake-haiti for a complete list of relief organizations that are currently taking donations.

Students can also text “Haiti” to 90999 to donate $10 to the American Red Cross to help out with disaster relief.

according to Task Force co-chair Celia Jackson, the root of the problem lies in the socio-economic differences that exist between black and white people.

“There is a big gap in understand-ing, between people of color and-white people in Madison,” Jackson said. “People don’t know how to talk

to one another. People from cultural backgrounds do things differently.”

These differences have proven to be significant. Compared to a relatively stable white population, the black population is often in transi-tion, moving between Chicago and Milwaukee. It is also much small-er, representing only 6 percent of Madison’s population but making up

between 25 and 30 percent of traffic stops, according to the report.

Large differences in the level of education and income also exist. “Due to systematic inequalities, com-munities of color get the fewest ben-efits during economic booms and experience the largest deficits in eco-nomic downturns,” the report said.

race from page 3

haiti from page 3

MiRAndA SchiEbER/the daIly cardInal

engineering student tyler lark works with three subcontractors on a pipe fitting repair in haiti.

erally range from $15 to $20, depending on the number of pages, the binding method and whether there is color, according to Amy Pigott, Sales Manager for Bob’s Copy shop on Randall Avenue.

If professors decide to put their class information on Learn@UW, “we will probably get their course packet information in case the student wants the printed copy,” Pigott said.

According to Pigott, professors try putting all of the class information online one semester and the next semester they have a course packet printed because students request it.

According to Scheibl, the book-store tries to carry as many used books as possible, and between forty and fifty percent of their book sales are used.

The University Bookstore tries to alleviate the costs of textbooks by selling used books for 75 per-cent of the cost of new books, according to University Bookstore President Pat McGowan.

“There is increasing pressure on the used book market as material is being bundled with items that are available only with new books. In some cases the students don’t get an option to buy used,” McGowan said.

According to McGowan, a book from the University Bookstore costs five to seven percent less than books at other campuses.

The Underground Textbook Exchange carries about 80 percent used books and also offers course readers. “We only make a couple bucks on a reader because teach-ers make that specifically to save the students money and we try to follow that,” said Underground Textbook Exchange Textbook man-ager Ben Maggio.

According to Maggio, to get the most back from your purchased textbooks, it is better to sell them back early because prices decrease as more books are sold back.

Another alternative to book-stores is the Associated Students of Madison Textbook Swap. The event began because students want-ed to provide an affordable option for purchasing textbooks that was accessible and run by students, ASM Academic Affairs Committee Chair Jonah Zinn said in an email.

“Since the program’s start in the fall of 2008 ASM has recognized that the soaring cost of textbooks is an ever increasing problem for students and is one that needs to be addressed immediately,” Zinn said.

The ASM Textbook Swap sells books at 65 percent of the University Bookstore’s new prices, which is about 30 percent more than what the student would get back at other bookstores because all of the money from sold books goes directly to stu-dents, according to Zinn.

“All of the feedback has been positive. I think that the campus community acknowledges the prob-lem of rising textbook costs and supports students helping other stu-dents to solve it,” Zinn said.

According to Zinn, the text-book swap is part of ASM’s Affordable Textbook Campaign to investigate rising textbook costs at their sources. Last semester the campaign pushed both the faculty senate and the academic staff sen-ate to pass resolutions to recom-mend to professors and instruc-tors to put book lists out earlier, to investigate alternate sources of textbooks and to continue using older editions of textbooks for longer periods of time.

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Page 6: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

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State Legislature passes drunken-driving reform billBy Ariel ShapiroThe DaIly CarDInal

Gov. Jim Doyle signed a drunken-driving reform bill Dec. 22 that overhauls current law and establishes stricter penalties for those caught driving while intoxicated.

The bill, which will take effect in July, includes an increase in fines and minimum terms of imprisonment, and requires all repeat drunken drivers and first time offenders with a blood alco-hol level of over 0.15 percent (nearly double the legal limit) to install ignition interlock devices.

In addition, the bill makes the first operating while under the influence offense a misdemeanor if a child under 16 is present in the vehicle. It also raises a fourth

offense from a misdemeanor to a felony if it occurs within five years of the most recent crime.

Although these are the most significant changes made to Wisconsin’s drunken driving laws since the mid-1980s, many politi-cians, including Doyle, say they see this bill only as a first step.

“It is a good bill and another major step forward to fight drunk driving,” Doyle said in a state-ment. “We still have a long way to go. The bill is not everything everybody wanted, and it’s not everything I wanted.”

State Rep. Marlin Schneider, D-Wisconsin Rapids, said the bill as it is will not only be ineffec-tive, but will be a waste of money and energy.

In addition to saying the bill is

“grossly underfunded,” Schneider said he has “seen these [types of ] bills come and go, and they have made little difference.”

State Rep. Peggy Krusick, D-Milwaukee, is working on her own bill that she says will com-plement and strengthen the one that recently passed. Krusick said her bill aims to legalize sobriety check points and make all firs-time offenses criminal.

Krusick said the effects of first-time offenses are not differ-ent from those of offenses com-mitted the third or fourth time and that three out of four fatal drunken driving accidents are caused by first-time offenders.

“I think it’s time to make drunk driving a crime every time,” she said.

Republican Senator Lasee decides to retire after 36 years in state Senate

State Sen. Alan Lasee, R-De Pere, announced his decision last week to retire after 36 years in the Wisconsin Legislature. Lasee did not give a specific reason for his retirement.

“After a great deal of thought and consideration, I’ve decided not to seek another term,” he said in a statement.

Lasee is known for advance-ments he made in the traffic sec-tor of his district. State Sen. Scott Fitzgerald, R-Juneau, said Lasee also successfully took on important eco-nomic issues.

“Alan’s common sense attitude has served our state well, whether tackling large issues like Wisconsin’s state highway program and property

tax relief or more specific ones like banning texting while driving. We will miss Alan in the Legislature, and we wish him well in his retirement,” Fitzgerald said in a statement.

Lasee said he is grateful to all those who have been a part of the state Legislature throughout his term as well as his family for their never-ending support.

“While Republicans and Democrats may have philosophi-cal differences on a number of issues, I have many memories of working together in a bipartisan fashion to make this state an even better place to work, live and raise a family,” he said.

—Michelle Langer

Report says recovery funds helped create or preserve more than 44,000 Wisconsin jobs

Over 44,000 Wisconsin jobs were created or preserved as a result of funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, according to a new report.

The report, filed by the Wisconsin Office of Recovery and Reinvestment indicates 8,964 full-time jobs were either cre-ated or saved. These jobs include 6,500 public service jobs such as firefighting and teaching posi-tions.

Wisconsin has been awarded

a total of over $2 billion by the ARRA and has expended almost $982 million for economic and job recovery initiatives. Over $246 million in funds had been awarded to Dane County as of Dec. 31, 2009.

According to the Wisconsin Office of Recovery and Reinvestment, over $1 billion of Wisconsin’s funds have gone toward education. Over $73 mil-lion went toward research support at schools in the UW System.

“Communities throughout

Wisconsin are benefiting from the Recovery Act that continues to create good jobs and make investments in our quality of life,” Gov. Jim Doyle said in a statement.

Despite reporting an increased number of saved or created jobs, the report warns that the numbers documented are “speculative.”

The Wisconsin Office of Recovery and Reinvestment spokesperson did not immediately return a call for comment.

—Hannah Furfaro

would grow up, marry and have chil-dren—with or without education,” Pasch said. “Given those expectations by society, women wanted to get mar-ried and have children and a home of their own … home economics pro-vided the science behind taking care of the home.”

The program actually began 30 years before this house was built. UW-Madison purchased the original home, known then as the Practice Cottage, in 1911 for less than $9,000.

However, Pasch said, in order to continue the expansion of these stud-ies, the home economics program needed a new space to practice.

She said former director of the UW-Madison Home Economics pro-

gram, Abby Marlatt, lobbied for a new home for over 20 years, and in 1941, her effort paid off with the construc-tion of a new house.

Pasch said the new house, complete with an electric dishwasher, washing machine and dryer, still held on to the basic structure of the program.

According to Pasch, over time, the practices became less scientific and the coursework began to focus instead on cleaning, home decora-tion and financial budgeting.

She said this reflected the chang-ing of women’s roles in the home and society at the time.

“Cultural changes such as the war in Vietnam, the women’s movement, the space program and the advancement in technology all contributed towards the ending of the required course,” she said.

“In the 1960s, these women were ‘called out’ by women strong in the women’s movement.”

Pasch said by the end of the 1960s, many women became upset with the requirement of the program, as some already had families and homes of their own.

She said that in 1970, Dean William H. Marshall reported that a “live-in practice house is neither desir-able nor educationally advantageous.”

The Home Management House program ended that year.

According to Pasch, over the next four decades, the house served as office and research space for the School of Human Ecology.

Within a few weeks, the structure will leave behind nothing but photo-graphs, memories and one of the most unique histories on campus.

ecology from page 4

Sen. alan lasee, r-De Pere, announced his decision last week to retire from the Wisconsin legislature after serving for 36 years.

Page 7: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

essay contestdailycardinal.com Spring Welcome Issue 2010 7l

By Candice LindstrumSpecIal to the daIly cardInal

The seeds of racism were plant-ed in the nation’s soil at its birth. With time, the seeds were cultivated, effectuating the growth of racism’s poisonous roots. A climactic per-petuation of racism occurred in the 1960s. During this time, the increase in racial inequality and segregation were challenged by the civil rights movement. This period in our his-tory is one filled with hate and violent atrocities. It was a time when America desperately clung to a dream and believed that “now is the time to lift our nation from the quicksands of racial injustice to the solid rock of brotherhood” (Martin Luther King Jr.). Fifty years have passed; has the dream of our nation been realized?

Racism was ensnared in the heart of American society in the ’60s. Segregation was “separate” but defi-nitely not equal. Minorities, espe-cially African Americans, were the victims of vicious hate crimes and inhumane treatment. This unfair treatment propagated the need for change. Civil rights activists faced the cruelties of humanity in their fight against segregation. In 1957, nine African-American students faced hostility when integrating an all-white high school in Little Rock, Ark. Guards lined the entrance to the school, denying the nine stu-dents entrance into the building until President Dwight Eisenhower sent federal troops. The students

were harassed by the community and were constantly discriminated against. The integration of Little Rock helped to disseminate desegre-gation throughout America.

Students also held sit-ins to peacefully protest segregated facili-ties. One of the most notable sit-ins occurred in Greensboro, N.C., where four black students sat at a segregated lunch counter and were denied service because of their race. This event triggered a wave of non-violent protests across the South. Around this time, one of our coun-try’s most inspirational leaders took a stand and together with 200,000 people participated in the March on Washington. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech repre-sented the needs of the people and their belief that with faith “we will be able to work together, to pray together, to struggle together, to go to jail together, to climb up for free-dom together, knowing that we will be free one day.”

The struggle to obtain equality was by no means a bloodless battle. Race riots were common, homes were torched to the ground, people were harassed, beaten and killed. They were subject to police bru-tality and imprisoned on a solely racial basis. The demonstrations and protests of the civil rights movement aided in the progression of racial equality. An example of this can be found in the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibited discrimi-

nation of all kinds based on race, color, religion or national origin. Thus, because of the momentous achievements of civil rights activists, America took a giant step toward racial equality.

In comparison to the injustice of the 1960s, America has under-gone a radical transformation in racial equality. There appears to have been a steady augmentation of racial acceptance and a notable decrease in racial discrimination. Today’s society seems to celebrate diversity and indi-viduality and an increase in racial understanding and amiability. The integration of schools was intended to allow all students an opportu-nity to receive a decent education. In addition, affirmative action plans have been created in order to pro-mote equal opportunity in employ-ment, education, health care, etc.

With time, America has wit-nessed the success of minorities and the barriers they have over-come in order to decrease white supremacy. Colin Powell became the first African-American secretary of state in 2001 and was followed by Condoleezza Rice, the first female African-American secretary of state. Barack Obama was elected the first African-American president of the United States. Sherman Alexie, a Native American, became a famous author, poet, filmmaker and come-dian. Toni Morrison won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Oprah Winfrey built a television and magazine

empire. Sonia Sotomayor became the first Latina on the Supreme Court. These prominent figures in American society have provided inspiration and hope to all people of color.

Despite the achievements America has made toward equality, we have a long way to go to become a fully inte-grated and equal society. There is still an overwhelming disparity in employ-ment, health care and education for minority citizens and poor whites. It is not necessarily an issue of racism anymore, but of socioeconomic dis-crimination as well.

One of the most intriguing dis-parities is that of education. The public school system is, in itself, unequal, both in quality of teaching and building facilities. Suburban public schools, because of the high property taxes in suburban neigh-borhoods, are endowed with supe-rior facilities and educational tools for student success. Urban public schools, on the other hand, tend to have inadequate teaching mate-rials and thus a lower percentage of successful students and higher

dropout rates. There is also a lack of adequate education reform and an inability of our educational leaders to improve the public schools. In addition, state-mandated standard-ized tests are unfair because they test all students despite learning differences and student readiness. Education, therefore, is offered to both minority students and white students, but still unequally.

In the past, fear and a false sense of racial superiority created a deeply separated society. This type of society did not elicit answers to a unified nation; rather, it created a “dual soci-ety.” Without working together, living together and creating a community of diversity, our nation will never be fully united. Once the nation reaches a higher level of integration, the popu-lation will be united on a deeper level. We have to remember our nation’s segregated past and the destruction and hate it precipitated.

The mind, in all of its complex-ity, determines identity, understand-ing and imagination. Individuals have the power to change the way the world thinks about race and eth-nicity. This can be achieved through education, peaceful protest, peti-tions, rallies and media influence. Gandhi said, “A man is but the product of his thoughts. What he thinks, he becomes.” Thus, in order to have any impact upon the world, we must use the power that rests inside of our minds to forge a new path on the road of our history.

The ’60s Plus 50: Injustice in Americalast semester, the daily cardinal held a ‘$1000 for 1000 words’ essay contest, asking students

to write about how far the world has come since the 1960s and how far we still have to go. Sophomore biology major candice lindstrum submitted this winning entry about the struggle

against racism in U.S. history, including the 1960s and the 2000s.

Without working together, living together and creat-

ing a community of diversity, our nation will never be fully

united.

Page 8: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

featuresl8 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/life-and-style

life and style

By Danny SpitzbergTHE DAILY CARDINAL

Fresh Madison Market is a new grocery store downtown with an enormous variety on the shelves as well as grab-and-go food and a deli counter. Located below the Lucky apartments at the corner of University Avenue and Lake Street, Madison’s latest shopping spot focus-es on choice, convenience and com-

petitive prices. What more could a student ask for?

Jeff Maurer, owner of Maurer Foods, LLC and head manager of the store, is still asking that ques-tion. “I’ve told my staff that six months from now, the store will look drastically different,” Maurer said, asserting his eagerness to serve the community that lives and works downtown.

Having been in the grocery retail business for nearly 40 years in Milwaukee and elsewhere, Maurer said he is proud to be open for business in Madison, adding that he has “a great deal of respect” for the Willy Street Co-op and Capital Centre Market and the communi-ties they serve.

“I spent a lot of time in their stores, watching their customers,” Maurer said.

For a year before opening , Maurer worked closely with three trustwor-thy and reliable consultants—his daughters. They all went to college out of state and lived off-campus, so Maurer drew on their food shopping tastes and experiences.

“They have a tremendous input into this layout,” Maurer said. He pointed out the food sections and spacious interior and beamed about the student artwork covering many support columns.

Maured said customer feedback will play a central role as the store adapts andhas been getting 10-15 suggestions daily. As we toured the store, Maurer greeted people and asked if they were finding what they needed, as did other employ-ees and cashiers.

From opening day, Jan. 9, the store has already seemed to give people what they want.

True to its name, Maurer esti-mated Fresh Madison Market carries 50 percent fresh food, whereas other stores carry only 30 percent. While rearranging the remaining packaged containers of sliced fruit in a large display case, Maurer said the case is nearly empty by lunchtime.

The Fresh Madison Market web site introduces their three-pillar busi-ness philosophy: eating well, green living, and community. The store makes, albeit modest, positive steps in these directions.

When asked how the store

puts its philosophy into action, Maurer said he was “providing many alternatives.”

The variety ranges from a section for organic food as well as gluten-free and celiac options, to many sections for soda, processed and/or packaged foods, and even a display case full of colorful jello molds.

Maurer is using old relationships with vendors, but is also building anew. Alongside standard brands shipped from all over, local products are available. Bread from two local bakeries, Nature’s Bakery and Bread Barn, sell out quickly. Sassy Cow Creamery, a small operation run by a family that Maurer knows, is one of the dairy suppliers. For fair trade items, there are packets of ground coffee. And of course, Wisconsin beef and many Wisconsin craft beers are carried as well.

Maurer says his produce comes from two main vendors he has used before “because of the climate here.” Although 50 percent of the food is “fresh,” far less of it is local. This is common among grocery stores. A vast amount of fruits and vegetables sold in the U.S. are grown mainly in California, for example.

While it may be a short walk to this grocery store, much of the pro-duce inside has traveled long distanc-es, or “food miles”, from large-scale farms using fertilizer and pesticide in production. However, in every aisle, Maurer drew attention to the energy-

efficient, glass-doored cabinets. “These reduce our carbon foot-

print,” he said. The cases are an expensive investment compared to the open, refrigerated display cases, but they reduce electricity bills and pay off in the long run.

The Fresh Madison Market web site also hosts a blog with store updates and occasional commentary on food. In an e-mail, Maurer ref-erenced a recent post written by another employee. The post summa-rizes information about high-fructose corn syrup and cites Michael Pollan’s work showing how corn products dominate the U.S. food and agri-cultural system. Ironically, during a tour of the store, Maurer pointed out a $2.45 bottle of maple syrup as an example of low prices. The sec-ond ingredient? High-fructose corn syrup. A much smaller bottle of “real” maple syrup next to it had a $4.89 price tag.

Although Fresh Madison Market is new to Madison, Maurer said the first few weeks have been encourag-ing. The store was full both times it was visited for the writing of this arti-cle, and Maurer said he has received over 500 applications for just 35 student positions, with dozens more arriving each day.

In the coming months, Maurer said his priority is “dedication to the people that are going to shop with us every day or every other day.” Online shopping will start in February, and in-store cooking classes and wine tasting may be offered later this year.

However, Maurer said he is think-ing about potential partnerships with the UW-Madison campus as well as other groups in the Madison food community. If working for the cus-tomers is any indication of how Fresh Madison Market may work with the local food and agriculture scene, Fresh Madison Market will be a welcome addition in town.

Fresh Madison Market: Quality is closeBusiness strives to bring fresh, local groceries to downtown at competitive prices

KYLE BURSAW/THE DAILY CARDINAL

Fresh Madison Market is the only full-service grocery store, offering a sushi bar, deli and wide produce selection along with classic pantry stand-bys.

Segredo: Finally, a Place for 18-20 setBy Ben PiersonTHE DAILY CARDINAL

From the ashes of Madison Avenue rises an under-21 hot spot that even the police—or at least the Alcohol License and Review Committee—can get behind. In contrast to the troubled history that the defunct Madison Avenue left behind, Segredo is clean, ele-gant and tasteful. Owner Michael Hierl said he has strived to cre-ate a venue that those above and below the drinking age can enjoy at night.

“We’ve programmed very specifi-cally for the 18- to 20-year-olds to come out and have a good time, and we want to be that place,” he said.

Hierl has taken great pains to turn the once controversial estabish-ment into a safe, inviting place to frequent. Instead of descending into a dark sweaty dance pit, visitors find themselves in a cool blue neon glow. The establishment has three separate socializing areas: a sports bar called Esportes, the quiet Segredo Lounge, and Boliche, Segredo’s much-hyped bowling bar.

Most of the dialogue about Segredo so far has focused on the boutique bowling and other unique

pub games. However, Hierl insists that “the soul of Segredo isn’t the bowling, it’s the food.”

True to from, the head chef and Hierl’s business partner, Ryan Dionne, has created a deli-cious menu filled with specialty cocktails and “mocktails,” a wide selection of beer and Goose Island sodas and a vast array of “platos” which Hierl describes as “deli-cious food in sizes bigger than tapas that you can share with your friends.”

Dionne’s menu does not disap-point. The food is fantastically well prepared, the textures and flavors are spot on, and, according to Hierl, they are trying to source as much of their food locally as pos-sible. The cocktails were stiff, but strong flavors masked the burn of alcohol, and their dry cousins the mocktails were just as tasty, perfect for designated drivers and younger patrons alike.

“The last thing we want to be seen as is some sort of exclusive place where you can’t afford to come so we’ve worked really hard to ke,ep our prices very reason-able,” Hierl said. “This is not your basic bowling alley,” Hierl added.

Segredo is a place to have fun. The bowling, Wii, and other games offer entertaining diversions.

“You’ll hear a lot of hooting and hollering, but we’re not going to be the place for cheap drink specials,” Hierl said, “If people want to get blitzed, then I suggest they find some place else.”

Segredo is a welcoming place

with great entertainment. A few of Segredo’s technical features were slightly annoying, but their effect on the overall experience was negligible. The bowling pins have strings attached to them, slightly skewing the game (to avoid paying for costly pinsetters), and they don’t offer tap beer. A waitress mentioned an accident

to the tap lines occured during construction, but she said the problem was being addressed.

Like all new establishments, Segredo has some kinks to work out, but their experienced staff, fun games and already impres-sive food and drink offerings will leave customers with a positive experience worth having again.

LORENZO ZEMELLA/THE DAILY CARDINAL

Patrons enjoy Chef Ryan Dionne’s platos along Segredo’s six boutique bowling lanes.

Jeff Maurerowner

Maurer Foods, LLC

“I’ve told my staff that six months from now, the store will

look drastically different.”

Page 9: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

featuresldailycardinal.com/features Spring Welcome Issue 2010 9

Balancing Science and Ethics

Story by Madeline Anderson Although animal activists oppose experimenting on primates, researchers support it for the benefits it brings to science.

student life

F or 17 years, researcher Ei Terasawa restrained rhesus monkeys and left them fully

conscious while repeatedly pump-ing deadly chemicals into their exposed brains. It wasn’t until the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) discovered that a neglect-ed monkey had accidentally died under her care that her push-pull perfusion experiment was put on hold and the treatment of primates in lab settings was reevaluated.

“There really aren’t any studies that don’t have extra problems associated with them,” said Executive Director of the Alliance for Animals and cofound-er of the Primate Freedom Project Rick Bogle. “The experiments are particu-larly heinous.”

Terasawa was a senior researcher at UW-Madison when her treatment of animals was made public.

Recently, the university made head-lines again after the USDA the Office of Laboratory and Animal Welfare found 20 violations, including depressed and vomiting dogs, during a surprise visit last month.

As one of only eight federally sup-ported research facilities in the nation, UW-Madison is often at the center of controversy surrounding the ethics behind using animals as test models.

According to the 2009 annual report from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center, which works closely with the university, imported and bred a total of 1,339 monkeys.

The monkeys used in the research are housed in a number of buildings around campus, said Bogle, where they become the victims of psycho-logical, viral, hormonal and physi-ological investigation.

Confined to cages for decades, “they’re basically locked in a box,” he said.

Bogle says this stressful, limiting environment contributes to what he believes is a high degree of self-mutila-tion and chronic diarrhea among the lab monkeys.

“We know that [primates’] mental lives are very similar to ours,” said Bogle. “In human terms, solitary confinement is considered cruel and unusual punishment, and yet we are keeping them in those situations some-times for their entire life.”

But those involved in primate research argue the health break-throughs from experimentation gen-erally outweigh the adverse affects on the animals.

According to the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center’s web site, within the past century, primate research has been used to help treat serious illnesses, such as polio, measles and pneumonia. And scientists are continually using animal experiments to find cures for HIV, determine risk factors for polycystic ovary disease and perfect

embryonic stem cell use, among many other projects.

Specifically, rhesus monkeys are good models for learning about HIV, said Jordana Lenon, public informa-tion officer and outreach specialist for the Wisconsin Primate Research Center and the Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Center at UW-Madison. Their reaction and symp-toms to Simian Immunological Virus (SIV) are almost identical to a human who is infected with HIV, although the pathology process develops faster in monkeys. While a human would develop the symptoms of AIDS within seven to 10 years, it would take a rhe-sus monkey only one to two years.

“This is good, because we’re trying to understand how HIV affects the body early on,” said Lenon.

Yet all monkeys infected with SIV must eventually be killed before they suffer from AIDS symptoms.

That is why monkeys, rather than humans, are used as test models, said Lenon. The U.S. government has declared it is wrong to perform certain invasive experiments on humans, espe-cially if they may lead to death. She says society as a whole is only comfort-able with infecting animals.

But Bogle insists that the benefits of HIV research do not outweigh the infected monkey’s death in the end. He asks, “What is our justification for test-ing on animals and not humans?”

The university takes a utilitarian approach, modeled after the govern-ment’s principles for the care and use of vertebrate animals used in testing, research and training.

The approach is essentially a bal-ancing test of potential harms and benefits, said Eric Sandgren, the direc-tor of UW-Madison’s Research Animal Resources Center.

“If an animal has rights, you can’t apply that test,” he said.

Sandgren explains that a right is a privilege granted to an individual, protecting that individual from the majority.

“I draw my line at the human-non-human boundary,” he said.

Sandgren believes it is unethical to use people in lab experiments because they possess the ability to understand the basic concept of human rights, while primates and other animals cannot.

Bogle looks at the ethical dilem-ma differently, arguing that it’s about freedom of choice, not intel-

lectual capacity. He says all testing on animals

is immoral because they can’t refuse to be part of a study: “The only ethical way to proceed with research, if we’re going to continue to test on live subjects, is to have all experimentation be voluntary.”

Until a solution can be found that satisfies all sides, the univer-sity has taken measures to guar-antee the best possible environ-ment for lab animals given its resources, said Lenon.

Within the labs, caretakers provide enrichment for their test models. Music and movies play throughout the day and the ani-mals are given toys with fruit hidden inside to challenge them. They also try to stimulate the primates’ senses, often popping popcorn so the monkeys can hear, smell, taste, touch and see an object simultaneously.

Both Lenon and Sandgren emphasize that proper treatment is an essential requirement for the con-tinuation of a study so that accidents like Terasawa’s are not repeated.

“Once a grant gets funded, we don’t just sit in isolation and do these experiments,” Lenon said. “If you get violations on how you treat your animals, you can be shut down. We’re definitely not above the law.”

Sandgren said that researchers will be suspended or fined, and often have to attend animal ethics classes for failure to comply with regulatory standards.

Regulation occurs at several levels. Nationally, the Animal Welfare Act enforces laws that ensure appropriate care of ani-mals in all settings. The National Health Service has also established

specific guidelines that must be followed if a program accepts funding. Locally, the Animal Care and Use Committee (ACUC), a group of 10 to 25 members, review animal experiments. There are a total of five ACUC’s at the university and these committees approve research requests, as well as evaluate and improve animal experiment protocols.

The committees take a proactive approach to catch problems before they occur, explained Sandgren. “We’re never optimal, but we try as hard as we can to be as close as possible [to follow-ing regulatory guidelines].”

Still, animal activists like Bogle are not convinced. He maintains that there is no excuse for jeopar-dizing an animal’s welfare.

“No matter how different they are from me, they’re experiencing life. That should matter.”

Life is precisely what drives sci-entists to use animals as models.

“There will always be a ques-tion that needs a living organism to find the answer,” said Sandgren. “Animals are our surrogates.”

Jordana Lenonspokesperson

Wisconsin Primate Research Center

“If you get violations on how you treat your animals, you can be shut down. We’re definitely

not above the law.”

Eric Sandgrendirector

Research Animal Resources Center

“There will always be a question that needs a living organism to find the answer. Animals are

our surrogates.”

NATASHA SOGLIN/THE DAILY CARDINAL

Page 10: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

comics© Puzzles by Pappocom

Solution, tips and computer program available at www.sudoku.com.

Today’s Sudoku

Answer key available at www.dailycardinal.com

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

Charlie and Boomer By Natasha Soglin [email protected]

l

Washington and the Bear By Derek Sandberg [email protected]

It’s My Life By Taylor Nye [email protected]

ABove IT ALL

ACRoSS 1 Have a trying

experience? 6 “Cheerio” sayer 10 Respond to the invite 14 Detach, as a

campaign button 15 “___ in Boots” 16 When it comes to

bones, they’re hip 17 Talent show once

hosted by Ed McMahon

19 Gum-producing plant 20 Upon this 21 Like some bank

money 23 The edge of night 25 Airhead 26 Baby boxer 29 Falsehood teller 31 Burn while ironing 35 Needle point? 36 Coarse particles 38 Become hardened

(to) 39 Hemingway saga 43 Cleaves 44 Lachrymal droplet 45 Mommy’s triplets 46 Drug-yielding plant 48 Faucet annoyance 50 Meet, in poker 51 Shrek, for one

53 Novi Sad native 55 Talk radio callers 59 Natural bath

accessories 63 “The ___ of the

Rings” 64 1987 movie starring

Cher 66 Milky white stone 67 A shade of beige 68 Axis powers, to the

Allies 69 Guileful 70 Dams and does 71 Knock-down-drag-out

fight

DoWN 1 Backside 2 Feed the kitty a

penny? 3 Practice punching 4 Tuckered out 5 Instill with life 6 Apr. 15 busybody 7 Be a pitcher 8 “My Fair Lady” horse

race 9 Dismissive scoffs 10 Pasta choice 11 Yarn irregularity 12 Ampule 13 Whittle down 18 Commissioned naval

officer

22 Comparatively congenial

24 Measure of gold fineness

26 Kind of lab dish 27 Definitely not cool 28 Get under one’s skin 30 Got one’s goat 32 Deceptions 33 ___ de menthe 34 “Steppenwolf”

novelist 37 “The ___ Bride”

(Rimsky-Korsakov opera)

40 It follows “First of all ...”

41 Accepted practice 42 Bay windows 47 Nefarious deeds 49 For the time being 52 Son of Cain 54 Carried, as by the

wind 55 Field furrower 56 Kachina fashioner 57 Evangelist Roberts 58 In need of an ice

pack 60 Big expense for

truckers 61 Supplier for Wile E.

Coyote 62 Scottish terrier 65 Certain Greek letters

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9.

Walk in the Park

Don’t tell the guys who made the “National Treasure” movies. On the new $100 bill the time on the clock tower of Independence Hall is 4:10.

10 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/comics

Sid and Phil Classic By Alex Lewein [email protected]

Ludicrous Linguistics By Celia Donnelly [email protected]

evil Bird By Caitlin Kirihara [email protected]

Page 11: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

artsdailycardinal.com/arts Spring Welcome Issue 2010 11l

“Avatar”Recapping the plot of this blue box office mon-

ster seems redundant by now–odds are that just about everyone reading this paid their $12 into the $1.4 billion that James Cameron’s 3-D journey to Pandora has made worldwide. If you’ve been hid-ing under a rock of unobtainium, “Avatar” takes us to a faraway world full of neon beasties who in the words of Colonel Quaritch “would eat your eyes for Jujubees,” combining the science fiction of “The Matrix,” the environmental overtones of “Pocahontas” and “Dances with Wolves” and the fantastic scope of “Lord of the Rings” into an epic that’s a tad long, a tad preachy, but still well worth the inflated 3-D admission price.

—Mark Riechers

Winter break films you may have missed“Sherlock Holmes”

In the celebrated 19th century detective series, the great detective Sherlock Holmes, along with his sidekick Dr. Watson, uses his cunning brilliance to solve London’s most baffling crimes. To the series’ longtime devotees, Holmes’ sheer wit sets him apart from other heroes. In this winter’s screen adaptation, the title character in “Sherlock Holmes” retains his classic shrewd eye for detail but is inflated with a generous helping of brawn. However, if you see this film with an open mind, Sherlock Holmes is a clever mystery with much to offer. Director Guy Ritchie’s dark and brood-ing London is a feast for cinematic eyes. Robert Downey Jr. plays a sharp and eccentric Holmes in a world where clues come first. His banter with Watson (Jude Law) is spot-on, showing both annoyance and intense camaraderie. This sharp who-done-it tale is immensely enjoyable and a perfect way to cap off the holiday season.

—Meg Anderson

“It’s Complicated”Nancy Meyers has written another formulaic roman-

tic comedy in “It’s Complicated.” Meyers’ fatigued story is saved by amazing performances from Meryl Streep, Steve Martin, Alec Baldwin and John Krasinski. Streep plays a divorcée, Jane, whose marriage ended after her husband, Jake (Baldwin), had an affair. A decade after the divorce, Streep is finally moving on with her life and starting a new romance with her architect, Adam (Martin). In a drunken stupor, Jake and Jane have the best sex that either can remember. Jane finds herself torn between the rekindled relationship with Jake, a new relationship and life with Adam and the desire to take revenge on Jake’s new wife (the woman for whom he left Jane). Streep, Baldwin and Martin bring levels of complexity to divorcées that go beyond cynicism, and show the pain, scars and realization that love is possible after a failed marriage.

—Lauren Fuller

“Brothers”The trailer for “Brothers” made the film look like a completely over-

done melodrama, revolving around a tiresome family love triangle and some wild overacting by Tobey Maguire. So what a pleasant surprise it was to discover that “Brothers” is actually one of the most mellow Hollywood films in recent memory, and it is all the better for it. Maguire’s character is a marine who disappears in Afghanistan and is presumed dead. Back at home, his wife (Natalie Portman) struggles to cope, while his black sheep brother (Jake Gyllenhaal) steps in to support her and her children. But this new family dynamic proves problematic when Maguire returns from combat. “Brothers” is an interesting study in family momentum, showing how families can be driven to remain in homeostasis, whether that is the ideal state or not. After seemingly endless looks into the seedy underbelly of family life in recent years, it is refreshing to see director James Sheridan craft such a measured and balanced examination.

—Todd Stevens

“Nine”In director Rob Marshall’s first film since the

extremely successful “Chicago,” Italian filmmaker Guido Contini (Daniel Day-Lewis) must produce a new film to meet high expectations while being haunted by the vari-ous women in his life. It was a seemingly perfect recipe: Oscar-nominated Marshall, an incredible star-studded cast (Day-Lewis, Judi Dench, Marion Cotillard and Nicole Kidman, to name a few), and a musical based on Federico Fellini’s “8 1⁄2” combined to generate extensive buzz, which made the over-the-top musical numbers that much more disheartening (i.e. “My Husband Makes Movies”). There’s no doubt about Marshall’s mastery of the alternate reality musical number (the vivacity behind “Cinema Italiano” and “Be Italian” was show-stopping), but with the film’s overall struggle to translate coherently from the original theatrical production, this is sometimes difficult to appreciate.

—Katie Foran-McHale

“Invictus”Based on John Carlin’s novel “Playing the Enemy,”

“Invictus” is the story of the South African national rugby team’s historic journey to the 1995 World Cup championship match. Newly elected president Nelson Mandela (Morgan Freeman) is faced with extreme racial tension and widespread prejudice throughout South Africa as the era of apartheid comes to an end. Mandela recognizes the need to find a unifying force within his nation and settles on the Springboks, the country’s national rugby team, led by captain Francois Pienaar (Matt Damon). Despite a slow start and a relatively predictable plotline, director Clint Eastwood provides a straightforward and moving message in this feel-good sports film. Both Freeman and Damon give strong, emotional performances that make the movie worth seeing.

—Jillian Levy

The Daily Cardinal’s arts staffers picked some of the most notable movies you might have forgotten to see amidst holiday cheer.

“Up in the Air”“Up in the Air” is one of those rare films that actually

deserves every bit of pre-Oscar hype that it receives. It is the deceptively simple story of a corporate ax-man (George Clooney) whose purpose in life is to rack up miles rather than human connections, but who comes to realize that it is a life as empty as it is free. Clooney’s uncharacteristi-cally vulnerable performance is devastating, while his co-stars, indie darling Vera Farmiga and Anna Kendrick of “Twilight” fame, are no less captivating. While “Up in the Air” stands proudly on its own as a character piece, what truly sets it apart is that it is the first film since the financial collapse to so accurately capture the frustration, anxiety and hope of recession-minded America. “Up in the Air” is not only a classic in the making, but also perhaps the film that will come to define this era of uncertainty.

—Ariel Shapiro

GRAPHIC BY CAITLIN KIRIHARA

Page 12: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

arts12 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/artsl

Don’t just ‘Let it Be’: Music tastes change over time

A nother decade of music has come and gone. Every one—let’s say from the

1950s on—embodies shifts in cul-tural and technological infl uences allowing unique artists and stories to develop in pop music. And as much as change is resented in almost all forms, it is inevitable. However, for avid music listeners, it becomes important to separate juvenile fascinations over greatness from truly relatable artists who are relevant to your life in ways deeper than their trendiness and your ability to talk about a band everyone can relate to.

This past decade, we learned to stay away from Auto-Tune as if it were those hyenas from “The Lion King” trying to pounce on innocent, unaware consumers. Big record labels became a Scar of the industry in search of the nic-est looking pieces of packageable profi teers. And our saviors from these power plays have been the garage-rock and post-punk cats too authentic in their tastes and infl u-ences to take themselves as serious as record labels would have them.

These contextual details allow us to come up with modern day Bob Dylans, who stand up to industry and cultural conventions, and Beatles, who melodically strive for pop stardom while refusing to clean themselves. What I came to realize over break is that this means it is only a matter of time before your adolescent fi rst love has to take a back seat to more relatable lovers of your own age.

However, as a friend and I realized when discussing our favorite artists, you are not alone when reapplying the boldest of bold statements. One of us had always proclaimed the Beatles as our favorite of all time and the other Bob Dylan. Boring, right? Nonetheless, they are time-test-ed, mother-approved and easy to identify with because of their uber-documented contexts and infl uence.

I initially got into the Beatles after receiving a copy of 1 and listened to see what their name rec-ognition was about. Similarly, I’m sure Bob Dylan was passed down to my friend as a starting block not only in songwriting, but American culture. It was as much status and context as talent that intrigued us, yet they delivered in a deeper way at the time because we came in with this background knowledge, leading to love at fi rst listen.

Yet, somewhere along the way, eclectic puppy love turned into contemporary love affairs and, eventually, long-term commit-

ments. Over the course of our college careers—and I mean whole career, it took both of us years to admit to ourselves (let alone oth-ers) that we may want to adjust the top spot in our iPods and hearts—our exposure expanded, and with that came a more self-actuated sense of musical identity, i.e. our tastes became more indi-vidualistic and current.

As hard as it is to let your fi rst love go, we acknowledged that at some point you have to grow up and move on. After all, the sonic and cultural revolutions going on in a foreign time period couldn’t remain the most relatable and appealing material as long as our ears shall listen. Eventually, both of us simply found an updated style of our original love.

Both of us being children of the ’90s, it took a while to fi nd our homes within contemporary landscapes. I went with somebody as melodically talented as (and often compared to) the Beatles in Elliott Smith, while my friend chose to stick with arguably the most culturally relevant band of the era: Pavement.

More than anything, this asserts the importance of chal-lenging your taste and palette as an appreciator of the arts. Luckily, as Mufasa taught us, the circle of life is organic and infi nite in its progress. And as rock ’n’ roll similarly unfolds before us, all we can hope to do is “be prepared” for industry tyrants and “feel the love” for new artists embodying our generation.

Still say the Beatles are your favor-ite band? Send your angry rebuttal to Justin at [email protected].

JUSTIN STEPHANIj.j. dilla

We learned to stay away from Auto-Tune as if it were those hyenas from “The Lion King” trying to pounce on innocent,

unaware consumers.

It is the job of the music appreciator to take changes in the sonci landscape in stride.

PHOTO COURTESY APPLE RECORDS

Despite major shifts in the sonic landscape, most music listeners blindly choose the Beatls as their favorite band.

Page 13: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

artsdailycardinal.com/arts Spring Welcome Issue 2010 13 l

Twisp is caught in his own mediocre middle-American existence when what he really longs for is a life of classical

poetry and vinyl records.

The great debate over Vampire WeekendVampire Weekend’s latest pushes pretentiousness but lacks true substance

Vampire Weekend display honesty in quaintness, solidify style Contra

By Kyle SparksTHE DAILY CARDINAL

After just 10 songs, Vampire Weekend became the face of indie rock. Combining Paul Simon’s Afro-pop and cardigan sweaters, the four Columbia grads swept the nation with their smug grins stretched ear-to-ear and pretentious dispositions emblazoned on their polos. And now, almost exactly two years later, they return with another rushed venture into half-hearted songwork that tests the limits of what we as listeners demand from our posterboys.

In Contra’s press packet, the band members take turns explaining the origins of each song. Apparently, they approached songwriting as attempts to mimic different genres, revealing a scholarly modus operandi that is very tell-ing of their nuanced output. They study the books of worldly genres and then render their interpretations in a songs-as-exams format. However, whether the variances therein are the product of innovation or an elementary understanding that misses the gestalt’s more distinguished elements is up for debate, as well as ultimately defining each listener’s opinion of this divisive group of complacent crapmongers.

Contra is a more vocal-heavy affair than Vampire Weekend, lead singer Ezra Koenig fill-ing each empty space (and then some) with his high-pitched squeaks and deeper, pensive retrospectives that dig about as deep as the group’s frail instrumentation allows. His voice doesn’t hold up well in the added attention, though, as his buoyant voice sounds less like a life preserver and more like a nagging mosquito as the album wears on.

They finally succumb to the rhythm sec-tion on “Giving Up the Gun,” delegating their eighth-note guitar strums to hand mut-

ing, but their weightlessness fails to lift the percussive groove off the ground. The bridge hints at an effective breakdown when the bottom falls out, but Koenig’s voice idles just long enough that it drops through the floor instead.

“Diplomat’s Son” is the most noticeable holdover from Rostam Batmanglij’s electronic side project, Discovery, and, like their self-titled debut, it hashes out the same ideas ad nauseum, borrowing chord progressions from VW’s own self-titled debut.

In a nutshell, that’s how Contra goes. The band’s handful of original ideas is stretched thin to cover 10 songs. They create ample filler by translating their study habits to music, but they don’t have enough novel ideas of their own to span a full album. They fill gaps by translating their notes on pop history, but they lack any substantive creative element that might sustain its appeal or propel their own identity. Without injecting their own voice into their songs, they deny themselves the possibility of appearing in the next wave of student-poppers’ notebooks.

Contra’s lead single, “Cousins,” features a hook that sounds lifted straight from the “Elements of Style: Introduction to Orchestra” book I used while first learning to play the violin in middle school. My fingers were always too fat and sloppy to truly excel, so I can respect their precision. Forgive my boasting, though, when I tell you that instead of giving up like so many others, I stuck through orchestra for several years. And while my cumbersome hands forced me to the more forgiving fret board of the bass, I can say firsthand that the more com-plex lessons in the subsequent tutorial books are a lot more interesting. And so it goes with Vampire Weekend. They are sharp, focused and refined, showing commendable prowess and dexterity, but the fact of the matter is they’re still a bunch of Ivy Leaguers playing middle school hooks. However, you can’t really blame them for cutting out the fat and giving us little to chew on, because the excess consumption would make their wiry frames less attractive in cardigans. And after two full albums of energized plagiarism, that—the smarmy, razor-thin, overly kempt aesthetic—remains the only argument the band has made for themselves as a genre’s posterboys.

By Emma RollerTHE DAILY CARDINAL

Vampire Weekend is a gimmick—much of the band’s initial appeal lives in their painstakingly planned image, both visually and musically. Just as Angus Young dressed in prep school clothes to bring attention to AC/DC, the members of Vampire Weekend consistently don Wayfarers, polo shirts and boat shoes to reinforce their prep-school image.

While some may argue that this focus on image makes the band phony, it shows Vampire Weekend may be more honest than other indie bands about their upbringing. Bands like MGMT cover up their east-coast privilege with eccentricity, and whether this is inten-tional or not, it shows a discomfort with their social status. Meanwhile, the Columbia-educated members of Vampire Weekend write songs about screwing on Benetton sheets.

Since releasing their eponymous debut album in 2008, Vampire Weekend have been branded “the whitest band” by Christian Lander, the author of “Stuff White People Like.” While most indie bands tend to retreat into the eccentric and leave all traces of “whiteness” behind, Vampire Weekend play songs with topics as preppy as their clothes. Contra reflects that same comfort with showing (but not showing off ) their privilege and does so with infectious, neatly packaged songs.

On “Horchata,” Ezra Koenig rhymes the name of a Spanish rice drink with “balaclava” and “Aranciata,” almost gloat-

ing over his irreverent cultural references. Although this tactic could quickly become tiresome, the song’s quaint marimbas, saccharine vocals and synthetic boops make it worthwhile.

“White Sky” offers blinking guitars and percussive handclaps accompanied by Koenig’s typically airy pop vocals. The chorus soars when Koenig’s tidy singing gives way to a birdcall with equal measures of assurance and desperation.

Using Afro-pop styling to serenade Manhattan’s art crowd, this song ultimately draws the usual reminders of Paul Simon’s Graceland.

“Holiday” is a wel-come venture into more conventional rock. “California English” pairs Auto-Tuned vocals with a cumbia beat handily, but Koenig rushes through the inane

lyrics like they are quickly running out of gas—no matter how hard he tries, he can never match Elvis Costello’s punky lyricism.

The charming keys and strings of “Taxi Cab” cut through the usual fre-netic self-absorption, and “Run” uses triumphant synths before breaking into snares and horns to reclaim the album’s breakneck pace.

“Cousins” is easily the best track of the album, supported by no-nonsense ska beats, jangling surf-rock guitars and a plodding bass line. It is irresistibly poppy, and Koenig even channels Ted Leo’s whiny pop-punk vocals.

“Giving Up the Gun” takes the earnest vocals of ’90s pop-rock to a more mature level, but the album ends with two unre-markable tracks. “Diplomat’s Son” starts off sampling the music of M.I.A. but oth-erwise has the same faux-African instru-mentation, and “I Think UR Contra” uses dreamy strings and vocals to give the album a soft but not strong landing.

Contra solidifies Vampire Weekend’s reputation, and despite the gimmicky nature of their songwriting, they deserve credit for accepting their privilege instead of denying it. What’s wrong with being honest?

ContraVampire Weekend

CD REVIEW

Turn your swag onTune into the Daily Cardinal Arts Desk

Updated every Sunday evening

dailycardinal.com/artsThere’s no question that the vocals of Vampire Weekend lead singer Ezra Koenig are poppy, the question is whether this deserves merit.

Since releasing their eponymous debut album in 2008, Vampire Weekend have

been branded “the whitest band.”

The band’s handful of original ideas is stretched thin to cover 10 songs.

PHOTO COURTESY XL RECORDINGS

Page 14: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

14 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/opinionl

By Jill KlostermanTEACH FOR AMERICA

I fi rmly believe the greatest gift you ever received did not come pack-aged. It did not have a bow or a box. It did not have a note attached. I fi rmly believe the greatest gift you ever received came from a teacher—per-haps many—who poured love into you in the form of education.

With education, you can see this text and read it. You can interpret my words and re-arrange them to create poetry, prose or perhaps a counter-argument. Because you are literate, you will never confuse a Buckeye with a Badger, even though they both wear red.

Unfortunately, college-prepara-tory education is a gift reserved for our nation’s wealthier classes. Although the CIA cites that 99 percent of U.S. citizens over 15 years old can read and write, the truth is that our nation is educationally polarized. By fourth grade, children who live in low-income communities are already two to three grades behind wealthier peers. Approximately half of the stu-dents in low-income neighborhoods will not graduate from high school by 18—those who do will perform on average at an eighth-grade level.

It hurts to recount this reality. It hurts to witness it. These numbers prove the existence of educational injustice, but they understate the heart-breaking affront to humanity. Behind

each number is a child whose life has been limited by inadequate instruc-tion. In my own classroom of 28 sec-ond-graders, I have seven who began the year below a kindergarten level. Without aggressive academic interven-tion, what will life hold for them? These children, at seven years old, are already signifi cantly behind their wealthier peers. Statistically speaking, because they live in low-income com-munities, only one in 10 of my stu-dents will graduate from college.

The achievement gap is our nation’s greatest injustice—and you can help solve it. I believe this as a teacher and as a member of Teach For America.

I stand as an example to everyone in this nation that educational ineq-uity can end with strong teachers. Politicians can haggle about tax bases and school resources, pundits can lay blame for bad parenting, but neither politicians nor pundits actually stand at the front of the classroom. Teachers do. Teachers hold the power. In my fi rst year, I helped children grow 1.5

years in reading. In my second year, my students are on track to meet or pass this rate of growth. Imagine the impact you could have.

There are many ways to join the fi ght to end educational inequity, but none parallels the impact of becoming an instructional leader. As a teach-er, you will actively change lives and futures. You will encounter students with unexplored brilliance. Their lives will enrich your own. Some days you may feel that injustice has a tangible weight, but the burden will stretch and remold you into a more effective leader for change.

The United States will remain in debt to its potential as a world power unless leaders emerge in education. UW-Madison boasts a student body with strong leaders in all curricular areas. Each graduate represents expo-nential potential—by giving the gift of literacy to one life, you will enrich another. Help end this injustice. Those who teach lead, and those who lead have the power to change.

Contact the campus recruiter for Teach for America and see how your college education can change our nation’s future.

Jill Klosterman is a 2008 graduate of UW-Madison and former Editor-in-Chief of The Daily Cardinal. She is a Teach for America second-grade teacher in Chicago. Please send all feedback [email protected].

Cardinal View editorials represent The Daily Cardinal’s organizational opinion. Each editorial is crafted independent of news coverage.

view

do your part to help haiti

T he swift response to the devastating earth-quake in Haiti has been

impressive and encouraging. Bill Clinton and George W. Bush stumping for the same thing is a good indicator of how Americans are putting aside dis-agreements to help our neigh-bors to the south.

Regardless of how often we hear of the situation on TV and online, more help is needed. New Orleans, a major U.S. city that suffered far less death and dev-astation after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, is still rebuilding. By a hefty margin, Haiti is the poorest nation in the Western hemisphere. Frequently bombarded by hurri-canes and still plagued by political violence, Haiti will not recover any quicker than New Orleans. The earthquake has affected 3 mil-lion Haitians—one third of the nation’s population. With deaths now predicted at 200,000, the United Nations is calling this is the worst disaster the international organization has ever dealt with.

Haitians are in crucial need of our help. It is unfortunate that it took such a jarring catastrophe to bring extensive aid and attention to the island nation not far from Florida. But its inhabitants need our help now more than ever. It’s the American thing to do. Our country has a vibrant Haitian American population. Haitians are our neighbors, both geographi-cally and sometimes literally.

To help out a local man doing good, consider donating money, supplies or perhaps even time to

Jake Wood’s relief team. A for-mer UW football player and ex-Marine, Wood is raising money and leading a relief team in Haiti. He updates activities and requests at badgerjake.blogspot.com.

Undoubtedly, spring break and summer service opportunities in Haiti will pop up this year and probably for years to come. Once Haiti becomes safer, the need for human hands will be just as great as the need for dollars. Water manes, roads and schools will take years to build back, perhaps to build for the fi rst time.

The simplest way for UW stu-dents to donate is with our phones. The Obama administration’s text messaging program to raise money for the Red Cross’s relief for sur-vivors has garnered $5 million in just over two days, according to ABC News. By texting “HAITI” to 90999, anyone can donate $10 to the Red Cross, a charge that will appear on their phone bills. Donations are used for such imme-diate needs as food, clean water and medicine, all by a trusted and estab-lished humanitarian foundation.

The program raised one mil-lion dollars within the first 24 hours. Such a response is quite representative of the Obama generation and its embrace of technology. Donations aren’t just mailed by your grandma anymore. Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius appeared on “The Colbert Report” to explain how to donate through texts and Michelle Obama is already in TV ads doing the same. Although a multitude of other charities are helping Haitians, such a scruti-nized program ensures your dol-lars are donated legitimately and used wisely.

We at The Daily Cardinal urge you to help however you can. We cannot stand by and watch our neighbors suffer, and all UW students should do their part to help allieviate this crisis.

Future movers and shakers: Serve society by joining Teach for America

W inter break is now over, and it is time for all of us at The Daily Cardinal to

shake the dust off our word processors and get back to work. Surely we’re in for four months of exciting breaking news, insightful commentary and pulse-pounding investigative reporting.

Or not, at least if this semester is as mind-numbingly boring as the last one.

There are often slow news days. There are often slow news weeks. But the fall of 2009 was a full-blown slow news semester, a veritable depression of fascinating material. The fall prior had the presidential election, complete with the accompanying Obama-fever. The spring after had local alderman elections and the ASM constitution battle. Those are topics that can draw some interest and have a natural sto-ryline to them. They all had some at least slightly fascinating characters, a clear central confl ict and a denoue-ment where everything is wrapped up, though the constitution vote did leave room for a possible sequel or two.

But last semester? Well, there was the Edgewater saga, which concerns a building that in all likelihood no current UW student will ever use or probably even see to completion, even if it does get built. On top of that, the project has a nasty habit of dying and then resurrecting itself. It’s more anti-climactic than Lord of the Rings.

Then there was the big ALRC tiff, which was basically just the ALRC and the Tavern League acting like a bunch of jackasses while we told you that the Nitty Gritty serves crappy food. Both of which are hardly new occurrences.

Oh, and there were a few weeks at the end of the semester where we ran around like a chicken with its head cut off talking about diversity. Good times.

Right off the bat, it doesn’t seem like the Spring of 2010 is going to be any kinder to your friendly neighborhood opinion columnist. The Edgewater saga continues and will probably encounter delay after delay well into the foreseeable future. Other than that, Mayor Dave took some heat for ineffective snow removal and the Ho-Chunk nation wants to build some museum at Union Corners. Also, the District 5 county board race looms, which is really the less interesting stepsister of the District 8 alderman race. The truly sexy news fodder remains elusive.

So with the outlook so boringly bleak, I am putting out the call: poten-tial newsmakers, make some news.

The governor’s race would be a good starting point. With each party only fi elding one real candidate (sorry, Mark Neumann) the real drama is still sev-

eral months off. You know how many legitimate candidates Minnesota has for governor right now? Fifteen. Yes, fi fteen. Lucky bastards. Paul Soglin, you joked about running for governor a couple months back. Throw your name into the ring. I don’t care if you can’t win, run anyway, if only for my amusement. And Tommy Thompson, you’re just being lazy. You could destroy Scott Walker with one of your four-termed guberna-torial hands behind your back.

On a more local level, it would help if the District 5 county board candidates create some chaos. Analiese Eicher and Michael Johnson both seem like normal, rational people, and this just will not do. One of you has to start a fl ame war with Kathleen Falk or make handing out Oreos at Gordon Commons the sole basis of your cam-paign platform, anything that makes you look incompetent.

Even potential ASM candidates can join the cause. Ever heard of the Pail and Shovel Party? They are the folks who created the original Lake Mendota Statue of Liberty. They also once covered Bascom Hill with pink fl amingos and promised to fl ood Camp Randall in order to stage mock naval battles, which sadly never came to fruition. How this party died is beyond me. I might even resurrect it myself if it’ll create some buzz.

Honestly, the slightest provocation will do. We’ll run with it, we’re good at that. We’ll do the work regardless, just please, notable people of Madison, give us something to work with.

Todd Stevens is a junior majoring in history and psychol-ogy. Please send all feedback to [email protected].

TODD STEVENSopinion columnist

Pray a dull fall doesn’tbecome a boring spring

So with the outlook so bor-ingly bleak, I am putting out the call: potential newsmak-

ers, make some news.

Each graduate represents exponential potential–by giving the gift of literacy to one life,

you will enrich another.

It is unfortunate that it took such a jarring catastrophe to bring extensive aid and atten-tion to the island nation not

far from Florida.

Donations are being accepted through text messaging services, with a $10 charge added to your phone bill to support earthquake victims. To donate by text:

-Text “HAITI” to 90999 to donate to the Red Cross. This program is sponsored by the White House.-Text “QUAKE” to 20222 to donate to the Clinton-Bush Haiti Fund.

For more information on other means of donation and possible volunteer opportunities, visit these charitable organizations:

-The American Red Cross at redcross.org, or visit their Madison locations on Sheboygan Ave. and Zeier Rd-The Clinton Bush Haiti Fund at clintonbushhaitifund.org-The United States Aid Offi ce at usaid.gov/helphaiti

The Haiti Relief Effort:Where You Can Help

opinion

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dailycardinal.com/opinion Spring Welcome Issue 2010 15l

opinion

T oday is the time to mine the Internet for higher educa-tion resources. Just recently,

California passed a law requiring that all college textbooks be available in electronic form by 2020. Some institutions have taken steps no less progressive. MIT, for example, has successfully run its OpenCourseWare (OCW) project for eight years, inject-ing a rare dose of philanthropy into higher education. By offering its course content online for free, MIT initiated the noble cause of open course projects. Many top universities, including Yale and Carnegie Mellon, have since joined the party. However, ideas to take the project further are somewhat more controversial.

Since its debut in 2002, OpenCourseWare has grown into a rich website, boasting 1,950 cours-es. Its influence extends far beyond MIT’s 168-acre campus. Curious students from home and abroad, individuals looking to beef up their job applications and well-estab-lished professionals all visit OCW to recharge themselves with knowledge and skills. The site recorded 50 mil-lion visitors by 2008. The project is inspiring not only similar cre-ations in other places, but also more novel ideas to facilitate online edu-cation. For example, iTunesU may have derived from the OCW motif “unlocking knowledge, empower-

ing mind.” While students don’t get feedback from projects like OCW, they could still make the learning process more interactive by form-ing study groups online. Tools like Google Wave make conference chats merely a few clicks away.

As more people jump into the bonus pool of free, open course learn-ing, some have taken it more seriously than a weekend hobby for inquir-ing minds. An increasing number of job hunters hope to write their OCW experiences into a resume. Consequently a proposal to attach credits to open course projects is gain-ing momentum. Even if universities don’t endorse the plan, proponents argue that there should be institution-issued certificates for people who have finished certain courses.

A call for certification might be going too far for open learning proj-ects. There are some valid concerns that this would dilute the brand names of universities. If everybody claims to have been a Harvard stu-dent, where is the world-renowned prestige built in the past 200 years? So far the open resources are mostly just course materials such as lecture notes, assignments and online textbooks. These can’t even make up a full defi-nition of “courses,” not to mention “education” (which is what is truly valued behind each diploma). Even if certification is in practice somehow, it could cause serious confusion during job hunting. When you claim to be “MIT-educated,” nobody doubts that you have gone through years of MIT’s rigorous course load and are right now a prestigious degree holder. But what if all you have done is taken an MIT

short course at home? Rampant certi-fication may eventually breed mistrust between employees and employers.

But on the plus side, the current “non-certification” approach could greatly benefit learners. If credits were attached, we would have to restrict our open course learning to only a couple of institutions, as cross-institu-tion certification is simply unlikely on a larger scale. As people slave over a “certificate” curriculum, the breadth of education becomes severely limited. Education without certificates allows for a more flexible schedule. People can go through each course at their own pace. Statistics show that despite a lack of credit rewards, the popularity of the OCW model hasn’t waned a bit. The open courses of MIT have been translated into many languages, such as Chinese, Spanish and Persian.

When President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Higher Education Act, he had the ambi-tion to make higher education available to working-class people. Four decades later, higher educa-tion remains an elitist choice where only middle class and above can shower in its blessings. Granted, like the Chronicle of Higher Education says, “free can be expen-sive.” But higher education entails much more than preaching doc-trine in an ivory tower. It is time for it to ride the changing waves. For people eager to learn, it is time to depart from the utilitarian view of certified education.

Qi Gu is a junior majoring in journalism. We welcome all feedback. Please send feedback to [email protected]

By Samantha EgelhoffTHE DAILY CARDINAL

If you haven’t heard the term “green” within the past few years, it’s likely you’ve been living under a rock. The green movement has become a nationwide cause, endorsed by countless celebrities and philanthropists. Even large-scale companies have started making “green” products or using renewable energies, all steps toward reducing the effects of global warming in our immediate future. Organics have also become a huge player in the movement. Organic food, clothing and even cleaning products have slowly started to work their way into the American home, despite their higher costs. But is the higher price worth the benefits?

Some would argue that there is nothing wrong with traditional farming. Mass-producing crops should allow for pesticide use to create the most crops for the least amount of money. Simple econom-ics, right?

Organic farming refers to rais-ing crops without the use of toxic pesticides or synthetic fertilizers. They employ crop rotation, chang-ing the kind of crops grown in their fields during each season, and prevent topsoil erosion, which keeps toxic substances from seeping into water systems. Livestock cannot be fed antibiotics or growth hormones and have to be maintained on a healthy diet (grass vs. corn-fed beef, for example). These methods have been shown to create healthier crops and livestock that may even have a higher nutritional content than traditional farming-created foods. Research implies the possibility that pesticide exposure leads to some common cancers and childhood diseases. Because of our advance-ments in technology, the amount of chemicals and toxins our bodies are exposed to daily is startlingly high. So why aren’t more Americans feed-ing their families organic foods?

Cost may be a main factor. While you can easily buy a bag of potatoes for under $2 at your local grocery store, a bag of organic pota-toes may cost twice as much. Many middle and lower class families would struggle to feed their fami-lies organically. Does it then rest on the government to lower organic costs? Do they have an obligation to their citizens to provide healthier foods and perhaps in the long-term reduce individuals’ health bills?

Because it is difficult to buy only organic foods and still have money to pay your rent, the Environmental Working Group has created a list of 12 foods that should contain the USDA Organic sticker during your next trip to Capitol Centre Foods. These foods, when not purchased organic, have the highest concentra-tion of pesticides: peaches, apples, sweet bell peppers, celery, nectarines, strawberries, cherries, lettuce, grapes, pears, spinach and potatoes. Basically, when you know you will be eat-ing the skin of the food, it should be organic. Pesticides concentrate in the first layer of foods, so foods like bananas and oranges with removable layers are safe to eat non-organic.

Besides some obvious health benefits, organic farming is also easier on the Earth and its resources. Traditional farming methods involve tilling (or turn-ing over the soil) which releases CO2, a proven greenhouse gas, into the atmosphere. Organic farming uses a “no-till” method, that uses 50% less energy and 60% less fossil fuels per unit of food. Organics provide another option to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and slow the effects of global warming. Buying organ-ic food may also be the easiest option to help our environment, since we might have a harder time reducing the amount we drive or the types of clothes we buy. Because organics are easier on the Earth, do we have a moral obligation to buy them?

I would say we do. Organic food has become an increas-ingly viable option at our local grocery stores. It used to be that they could only be found on small family owned farms or local farmers markets, but they are now available in both devel-oped and developing countries worldwide. They are better for our bodies, minds and environ-ments. They keep small compa-nies and farms in business, cre-ate jobs and may help with our country’s economic situation. Personally, I see no reason why organic food shouldn’t make up the majority of our grocery carts. Yes, the costs may be high, but I’m willing to pay the price for a healthier future.

Samantha Egelhoff is a Daily Cardinal contributor. We welcome all feedback. Please send responses to [email protected].

New campus grocer gets approval of Captain Planet

OpenCourseWare brings both new benefits and questions to universities

QI GUopinion columnist

F resh Madison Market opened its doors to the public two Saturdays ago, and as the only

full service downtown grocery store it is sure to change the face of Madison and the downtown living experience. It is difficult to believe that downtown Madison has, up until now, lacked a full service grocery store. For years residents of downtown Madison, and the surrounding area from the near east side to the Vilas neighborhood, have been forced to drive or take a bus to the Hilldale Metcalfe and Copps, the southside Copps, or fork over for the inflated prices at Cap Center or Open Market Pantry.

With the addition of Fresh Madison Market, downtown Madison is becoming more resi-dent and environmentally friendly. Downtown residents will now be able to shop where they live, walk-ing or biking to the grocery store, and cutting down on car and bus trips. While many have been living downtown without a car for years, perhaps the addition of a grocery store will encourage others to lose their wheels in favor of their own two legs as access to a grocery store will make self sufficient downtown

living possible for both students and non-students.

City dwellers statistically use fewer resources than country folks. Country living requires longer and more frequent automobile trips to the store, school, work, etc. In addition, homes in the country tend to be older, larger and less efficient, meaning they require more energy to heat in the winter and to cool in the summer. Consequently, liv-ing in a city, particularly living in a downtown setting that requires little fossil fuel consumption, is more environmentally friendly. One could argue, and I would, that Fresh Madison Market has made down-town Madison more environmen-tally friendly as it makes it possible for downtown residents to eliminate driving to the grocery store.

I hope Fresh Madison Market will be as kind to the wallet as it will be to the environment. As the only full service downtown grocery store, the Market could potentially charge higher prices. Fresh Madison Market does have the element of convenience on its side, but inflated prices could still drive customers away, and it would be a shame to see downtown residents continue to drive in search of lower prices at Copps or SuperTarget.

In addition to reducing the amount of time and energy spent traveling to the grocery store, another way in which Fresh Madison Market is contributing to downtown living

is by offering––and focusing on––healthy food options. In a recent interview with the Wisconsin State Journal, Fresh Madison Market owner Jeff Maurer emphasized that he wants to provide healthier eat-ing options and that fresh produce, as evidenced by the colorful win-dow displays, will be integral to the Fresh Madison Market shopping experience. Maurer recognizes the importance of a healthy diet and the increasing interest, especially among young adults, to eat well. “I’m amazed at how well-educated the younger generation is about what they are eating,” said Maurer.“This is a much healthier generation com-ing up.”

According to its website, Fresh Madison Market’s philosophy includes eating well, green living and community. The opening of the local family owned grocery store in downtown Madison at the begin-ning of a new year and new decade rings in a new era for Madison. It’s about time that downtown living became more feasible and friendly for our health and the environment. The existence of a full service gro-cery store downtown is long over-due, and the Market’s contribution to the downtown community is has been a long time coming.

Kathy Dittrich is a senior majoring in English and French. We welcome all feedback. Please send responses to opinion @dailycardinal.com.

KATHY DITTRICHopinion columnist

Eating organic: Is it really worth the cost?

Why aren’t more Americans feeding their families organic

foods?

Personally, I see no reason why organic food shouldn’t make up the majority of our

grocery carts.

Page 16: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

16 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/sportsl sports

Winter Break TimelineWhile many students rested up over winter recess, a number of Wisconsin teams were hard at work. Here’s a look at the Badger games you might have missed.

Dec. 23Men’s Basketball

Wisconsin 68, Milwaukee 58

Dec. 28Women’s Basketball

Wisconsin 62, Michigan State 46

Dec. 27Men’s Basketball

Wisconsin 79, Illinois-Chicago 43

Dec. 29Football

Wisconsin 20, Miami 14Dec. 31

Men’s BasketballWisconsin 65, Ohio State 43

Women’s BasketballWisconsin 61, Iowa 51

Jan. 2Men’s Hockey

Wisconsin 5, Merrimack 4Jan. 3

Men’s BasketballWisconsin 63, Penn State 46

Women’s BasketballIllinois 53, Wisconsin 52

Men’s HockeyWisconsin 2, Yale 2

Jan. 5Women’s Hockey

Team USA 9, Wisconsin 0

Jan. 6Men’s Basketball

Michigan State 54, Wisconsin 47Jan. 7Women’s Basketball

Wisconsin 64, Purdue 51 Jan. 8Women’s Hockey

North Dakota 3, Wisconsin 1Jan. 9Men’s Basketball

Wisconsin 73, Purdue 60

Men’s HockeyWisconsin 7, U.S. National

Under-18 Team 1

Women’s HockeyWisconsin 2, North Dakota 0

Jan. 10Women’s Basketball

Wisconsin 68, Michigan 48

Jan. 14Women’s Basketball

Wisconsin 48, Michigan State 45

Jan. 13Men’s Basketball

Wisconsin 60, Northwestern 50

Jan. 15Men’s Hockey

Wisconsin 4, Colorado College 0 Jan. 16Men’s Basketball

Ohio State 60, Wisconsin 51

Women’s HockeyMinnesota-Duluth 5, Wisconsin 3

Men’s HockeyColorado College 6, Wisconsin 5

Jan. 17Women’s Basketball

Wisconsin 63, Illinois 51

Women’s HockeyMinnesota-Duluth 2, Wisconsin 1

Big improvement: Defense shuts down Harris in bowl win

UW shines in regular season and exhibition action

The timing of this year’s break was bittersweet for the Badger men’s hockey team. While the limited action gave the players a chance to get healthy and rest legs, the Badgers were also playing their best hockey of the year when the first half of the schedule closed out Dec. 12.

Over break, however, Wisconsin played some qual-ity opponents with a good deal of success.

The Badgers hosted the final Badger Hockey Showdown at the Kohl Center Jan. 2 and 3. The week-end proved successful for the Badgers, who downed Merrimack 5-4 Saturday night before wrapping up the tournament title Sunday, beating No. 9 Yale 2-1 in a shootout after tying 2-2 in regulation. Senior forward Blake Geoffrion scored the final shootout goal in front of a raucous crowd to ensure the victory.

Three Badgers helped the Team USA U-20 team bring home a gold medal from the 2010 World Junior Hockey Championships in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, as well. Sophomores Jake Gardiner and Derek Stepan and freshman John Ramage represented Team USA, along with assistant coach Mark Osiecki. Stepan captained the team, led the tournament in scoring (4 G, 10 A), and was named to the Media All-Star team.

The WJC team was reunited with some of their teammates when the Badgers took on the U.S. Under-18 National Team at the Kohl Center Jan. 9, downing the young squad 7-1. Geoffrion and senior Michael Davies each contributed two goals in the exhibition contest.

—Parker Gabriel

Senior forward Michael Davies and the Wisconsin offense continued to thrive over winter recess, carrying the Badgers through a successful break.

DANNY MARCHEWKA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

LORENZO ZEMELLA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

The Wisconsin defense shut down dangerous Miami quarterback Jacory Harris in the Badgers’ 20-14 victory over the Hurricanes Dec. 29.

Badgers off to rocky second-half start with tough series

Pair of wins over Michigan State highlight successful break for UW

Junior guard Alyssa Karel and the Badgers defeated a ranked Michigan State squad twice over winter break.

LORENZO ZEMELLA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

After nearly two weeks off, the Wisconsin women’s basket-ball team grabbed one of its most impressive victories of the sea-son Dec. 28 at the Kohl Center. The Badgers faced off against just their second ranked opponent of the season and came out victo-rious against No. 16 Michigan State, 62-54.

Junior guard Alyssa Karel led the Badgers in scoring en route to the upset with 21 points, but senior guard Rae Lin D’Alie shined the brightest for Wisconsin that night. D’Alie fin-ished the contest with 13 points, six rebounds, seven assists and an impressive six steals.

The Badgers carried this momentum into Iowa City three days later but were flattened 61-51 by the Hawkeyes despite another 22 points from Karel.

The slide continued as Wisconsin traveled to Illinois Jan.

3. The Badgers led at halftime, but freshman Taylor Wurtz’s game-high 14 points were not enough, as the Illini sunk the winning basket with time expiring to hand Wisconsin a 1-3 record in Big Ten play.

The Badgers found their way home four days later, however, and came out fighting against Purdue. Karel’s game-high 21 points, along with three other players in double figures, carried Wisconsin to a 64-51 victory, while Wurtz delivered a career-high 27 points Jan. 10 as the Badgers dominated Michigan 68-48 at the Kohl Center.

Four days later, Wisconsin upset No. 20 Michigan State for the second time in just over two weeks. Wurtz again led the Badgers in scoring with 16 points as Wisconsin climbed back from a 14-point deficit to defeat the Spartans on the road, 48-45.

—Mark Bennett

The Wisconsin football team closed 2009 with something that had eluded it throughout the sea-son: a victory over a ranked team.

The Badgers downed the No.15 Miami Hurricanes in their own territory at the Champs Sports Bowl 20-14. The Wisconsin defense throttled Miami’s prolific passing offense, holding it below 200 yards and sacking sophomore signal caller Jacory Harris five times.

Junior tight end Lance Kendricks gashed the Hurricane secondary for 128 yards, and sophomore running back John Clay spearheaded the Badgers on the ground with 121 yards on 22 carries, as well as a pair of short scores.

Miami opened the game with a reverse on the kickoff that led to a touchdown just 23 seconds into the game.

Despite the inauspicious start, Wisconsin snapped back to dominate the next 55 minutes of play, controlling the clock and holding the ball for almost two-thirds of the game.

A pair of turnovers limited the Badgers’ ability to cash in on that domination, and despite scoring 20 unanswered points, the Hurricanes still had a chance with five minutes to go. Harris engineered a 79-yard drive to pull his team within a score, but after Miami recovered an onside kick, Harris was stopped on four straight plays and the Badgers ran out the clock.

The win propelled Wisconsin to No. 16 in the final rankings and had some projecting it in the top 10 of next year’s preseason polls.

—Ben Breiner

The new year has not been kind to the No. 7 Wisconsin women’s hockey team so far, as the Badgers have struggled to a 1-3-0 record in their two series againt North Dakota and Minnesota-Duluth.

Wisconsin started 2010 with an exhibition con-test against the U.S. women’s national team at the Kohl Center, a game that saw the return of seven current or former Badger hockey players and head coach Mark Johnson.

In front of a record crowd of 6,085 fans, Johnson and Team USA shut out the Badgers 9-0, but despite the blowout loss, many Wisconsin fans went home happy having seen five Badger hockey alums score points in the game.

The team returned to action and started the second half of its season Jan. 9 on the road against North Dakota. Repeating a common trend from the first half, Wisconsin fell to its opponent in the first game of the series, dropping the series opener 3-1, before coming back to take a 2-0 win the next day.

That trend didn’t hold up against No. 5 Minnesota-Duluth, however, as the Badgers suffered their first sweep of the year against the Bulldogs, falling in a pair of close contests 5-3 and 2-1 on Friday and Saturday.

—Nico Savidge

Page 17: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

By Mark BennettTHE DAILY CARDINAL

The Wisconsin women’s basket-ball team has seen its fair share of highs and lows this year. But since reaching its lowest point following a last-second loss at Illinois two weeks ago, the team has reached new heights.

The one-point loss to the Illini dropped the Badgers to 1-3 in Big Ten play but also appears to have served as a catalyst. In the games since, Wisconsin has rattled off four straight conference victories, includ-ing one over Illinois Sunday night at the Kohl Center.

Junior forward Tara Steinbauer proved the star in this contest, as she scored a career-high 23 points while collecting seven rebounds. Steinbauer praised her team’s balanced attack.

“One of the greatest things about our team is that we have so many threats,” Steinbauer said. “On any given night, one person can be the star,

and today I scored 23 points, but I give a lot of credit to my teammates.”

Wisconsin’s 11th-ranked defense in the nation lived up to its name, starting tough and staying strong throughout. The Illini found them-selves trapped early, resulting in poor shots and an abundance of turnovers. Illinois failed to make a basket until almost four minutes into the contest, and turned the ball over 16 times throughout the game, including seven traveling violations.

However, it took Wisconsin only 19 seconds to get into the scoring act as Steinbauer sunk a pair of free throws to begin her career evening. Meanwhile, freshman guard Taylor Wurtz, who had led the Badgers in scoring the previous two games, found her stroke early, hitting two 3-pointers after less than six minutes on the floor. Wurtz, who has grabbed Big Ten top freshman honors the past two weeks, finished the night with 11 points and five rebounds.

The Badgers took a four-point lead into halftime, but many key players for Wisconsin were held scoreless during the first period, most notably junior guard Alyssa Karel.

However, Karel and the rest of the Badgers came out of the locker room strong. Karel finished the second half with 9 points, and Wisconsin shot nearly 60 percent from the floor in the half.

The Badgers never trailed in the contest and maintained a double-digit lead over the Illini for most of the second half. However, some poor free-throw shooting and foul trouble kept the closing minutes interesting.

“Just don’t let your highs get too high or your lows get too low,” head coach Lisa Stone said. “We need to stay right where we’re at and keep getting better.”

Wisconsin looks to continue its streak Thursday night at the Kohl Center, where they will take on Penn State at 7 p.m.

dailycardinal.com/sports Spring Welcome Issue 2010 17 sports l

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crown jewel of the season, show-ing that a group recruited and coached by Bielema could indeed compete with and vanquish strong, talented opponents.

In the world of coaching, how-ever, every conquered challenge brings new ambitions, and Bielema must face down yet another sore spot in his resume—meeting those pesky expectations.

Twice Bielema’s teams entered a season ranked in the top 12, and twice they finished the season far lower than projected. After the bowls, both ESPN and Sports Illustrated tabbed Wisconsin as the No. 10 team in their first pre-season rankings.

With the Badger faithful expect-ing 2010 to be special, the coach will again have his work cut out for him. For now, however, he can take pride in knowing 2009 was a job well done.

Think next year’s hype will be too great and the Badgers will yet again fail to live up to it? Enlighten Ben at [email protected].

bielema from page 20

Head coach Bret Bielema was subjected to plenty of criticism after last season, but now has UW heading in the right direction.

Steinbauer shines as Badgers keep improving in win over Illini

Women’s Basketball

KYLE BURSAW/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

Junior forward Tara Steinbauer is scoring 8.5 points per game for the Badgers, who are now 5-3 in conference play.

Women’s Hockey

UW struggles on road, falls in first series sweepBy Nico SavidgeTHE DAILY CARDINAL

The Wisconsin women’s hockey team fell in a pair of close contests to the Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs on the road, coming up short in a comeback effort Saturday and struggling offensively Sunday. Those losses mark the first time the Badgers have fallen in a series sweep this season.

Wisconsin had earned three points against Minnesota-Duluth earlier in the year as the Badgers earned a win and tie over the Bulldogs at the Kohl Center Dec. 4 and 6. Although Wisconsin has had issues against weaker opponents, it has stepped up in its games against strong opponents. The Badgers were 3-0-1 against No. 2 Minnesota and No. 5 Minnesota-Duluth heading into last weekend’s series.

Wisconsin notched the open-ing goal of the series as freshman forward Breann Frykas scored on a rebound in the first period of

Saturday’s game. However, a pair of Duluth goals gave the Bulldogs a lead they did not give up.

Minnesota-Duluth scored four unanswered goals and jumped out to a 4-1 lead 2:34 into the second period before the Badgers began their comeback. Goals from fresh-man forward Brianna Decker and junior forward Carolyne Prevost brought Wisconsin back within one early in the third period.

But despite outshooting the Bulldogs throughout the game, Minnesota-Duluth put the con-test out of reach with a final score from Bulldog freshman forward Jessica Wong. For the sixth time, Wisconsin dropped the opening game of a series—the Badgers are 2-6-2 in series openers.

Wisconsin has faired much bet-ter in the second game of series this year, notching a 9-1-1 record coming into the series in Duluth. But against one of the top teams in the WCHA and women’s hockey

as a whole, the Badgers fell in the series finale.

Scoring was hard to come by for both teams, as Wisconsin senior goal-tender Alannah McCready and Bulldog freshman goalie Jennifer Harss battled throughout the game. Minnesota-Duluth struck first with a four-on-four goal in the opening period.

The Bulldogs added another goal early in the second period to increase their lead, but a goal from junior defender Geena Prough brought the Badgers within one. However, Harss held strong through the final period to help the Bulldogs to a 2-1 win and improve their record to 15-7-2.

Wisconsin must now recover from its first sweep since 2007 and will face St. Cloud State at the Kohl Center this weekend. When the teams last met Nov. 20-21 the Badgers won the opening game of the series but fell in the second.

—uwbadgers.com contributed to this report.

DANNY MARCHEWKA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

Junior defender Geena Prough’s goal against Minnesota-Duluth Saturday was not enough to complete a comeback effort for UW.

ISABEL ÁLVAREZ/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

Page 18: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

l18 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/sportssports

game. Ohio State only outscored the Badgers 22-16 in the paint, with the Badgers taking the advan-tage in second-chance points while also keeping rebounds even at 27.

The Badgers caught their sec-ond wind after halftime down 34-22. A layup by junior for-ward Keaton Nankivil and 3s from Hughes and junior forward Tim Jarmusz propelled Wisconsin to an 8-0 run and cut the Buckeyes’ lead to four. With 16 minutes left in the game it looked as though the Badgers could produce a come-back effort like they did against Northwestern in Evanston.

But it is hard not to miss Leuer’s 6'10" frame and 15.4

points and 6.2 rebounds per game though, and the poor shooting in the first half was too much to overcome. The pair of Turner and Lighty quickly helped the Buckeyes regain a 10-point advantage thanks to some untimely turnovers by Wisconsin. The Badgers finished the game with 14 turnovers and only seven assists.

With just under four minutes to go, a 3 by Nankivil brought the Badgers to within seven. But they went cold after that, missing four straight shots and turning the ball over twice.

Wisconsin, who had four of its fi rst six Big Ten games on the road, comes home for two straight games with a 4-2 record.

Need to KnowWisconsin Badgers

Ohio State Buckeyes

51

60

David Lighty: 18 points on 7-of-10 shooting. Trevon Hughes: 18 points on 7-of-16 shooting.

22 29

2634

The return of Evan Turner and the task of playing on the road proved to affect Wisconsin, after the Badgers had beaten the

Buckeyes by 20-plus points earlier this season in Madison.

basketball from page 20

By Scott KelloggTHE DAILY CARDINAL

Coming back from winter recess is typically strange when follow-ing the Wisconsin men’s basketball team. Before the break, Wisconsin has usually only played games against one or two worthy foes, which means many questions about how good the team is in a given year remain unanswered. Then, many students leave Madison for a month, and by the time they return, the Badgers have then played in fi ve or six Big Ten games, and fans now have a pretty good idea of how the team can play that season. Ironically, the period when most students are out of town is one of the most important stretches of Wisconsin’s schedule.

This year, however, was a lit-tle different. Normally, with the exception of its annual matchup with Marquette, Wisconsin faces perhaps only one other challenging opponent. But this year Wisconsin had the chance to play three tough teams in the Maui Invitational and then of course had the matchup with Duke in early December.

Because it played against so much higher-level competition in November and December, Wisconsin achieved an identity early this season: a team that could count on senior guard Trevon Hughes and junior forward Jon Leuer to generate offense, use its bench to its advantage and compete with perhaps any team in the nation.

Those around Wisconsin bas-ketball had a pretty good idea Wisconsin would be successful heading into the early portion of its Big Ten schedule, and that is exactly what happened.

Wisconsin’s 4-2 record rep-resents a solid start to the Big Ten season. The Badgers con-tinued their tradition of strong play and picked up two road victories against Penn State and Northwestern, which is seemingly becoming a very difficult place to play (just ask Purdue).

Wisconsin lucked out by fac-ing the Buckeyes at home on New Year’s Eve without standout Evan Turner and beat then-No. 4 Purdue at home for a strong win to mark on its resume. The two losses both came on the road and against upper-level Big Ten teams in Michigan State and Ohio State, two defeats UW can ultimately live with.

By far the largest negative of Wisconsin’s season thus far is the injury to Leuer. The Badgers had to be excited about the improve-

ment Leuer displayed early on, showing great strides in his low- and high-post offensive game and also developing into a physical low-post player on both sides of the ball, especially on rebounding. These advances made by Leuer are reflected on the stat sheet, as Leuer was scoring 15.4 points per game and grabbing a team-high 6.2 rebounds before he went down with his wrist injury.

His points-per-game average in 2009-’10 nearly doubles his average the season before, and the rebound-ing numbers also represent improve-ment. Leuer would also typically match up against opponents’ great-est low-post scoring threats, thus replacing his output on offense and defense will be challenging.

Much of the load falls on junior forward Keaton Nankivil. Nankivil’s jump shot is a weapon for this team, but Nankivil cannot perform physi-cally down low like Leuer could. Freshman Ryan Evans should see an increase in playing time with Leuer’s absence. Evans has shown an ability to get physical around the glass this season, but his offensive ability, at least at this point in Evans’ career, is nowhere near Leuer’s.

Other candidates to fill in for Leuer include freshman forward Jared Berggren, who shows glimps-es of capability on offense but is still inexperienced, and freshman forward Mike Bruesewitz, who is not afraid to get phsyical on either side of the ball but a long way

from becoming a scoring threat for the Badgers.

On a more positive note, sopho-more guard Jordan Taylor is now playing with a high level of con-fi dence after netting a career-high 23 points in Wisconsin’s big victory over Purdue, proving he can now operate as a primary scoring option for Wisconsin. Taylor came up big against the Boilermakers with Leuer hampered by the wrist injury.

Another scoring option from the outside is senior guard Jason Bohannon. Since arriving in Madison with the reputation of a sharpshooter from the perimeter, Bohannon has transformed into more of a streaky scorer than a reliable option. But Bohannon’s 3-point numbers are up from last sea-son. After shooting 36.6 percent last season, Bohannon is now at 39.8 percent from long distance.

Moving forward, Leuer will be desperately missed by the Badgers, but Wisconsin should still be confi -dent in the weapons they have.

At home, Wisconsin is capable of beating anyone remaining on their schedule, even No. 6 Michigan State. But winning a Big Ten cham-pionship may now be unachievable without Leuer.

Still, Leuer’s injury will not destroy Wisconsin’s season, as the Badgers should still fi nish strong with a relatively high NCAA Tournament seed and hopefully welcome Leuer’s return by tourna-ment time.

Men’s Basketball

Wisconsin begins Big Ten play well but will sorely miss Leuer

No Badger development over winter recess was more signifi cant than the wrist injury of junior forward Jon Leuer.

LORENZO ZEMELLA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

ANALYSIS

Senior guard Trevon Hughes jacked up nine of Wisconsin’s 26 3-point attempts Saturday against Ohio State.

KYLE BURSAW/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

Page 19: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

dailycardinal.com/sports Spring Welcome Issue 2010 19 lsports

Feast or famine: UW splits series with Tigers

Men’s Hockey

By Parker GabrielTHE DAILY CARDINAL

The No. 3 Wisconsin men’s hockey team blew out of the gate against No. 8 Colorado College Friday night, tallying its fi rst goal less than a minute into the game en route to a dominating 4-0 victory. But the

Badgers then gave up four fi rst-peri-od goals, and, despite a comeback, fell 6-5, splitting the series and miss-ing a chance to gain ground in the race for the MacNaughton Cup.

Senior forward Ben Street notched a goal just 43 seconds in to the fi rst period to jump start

the Badgers’ offense Friday night. Sophomore forward Derek Stepan earned an assist on the play, and fi n-ished the night with a goal and two assists in his fi rst action since return-ing from the World Junior Hockey Championships.

Junior defenseman Brendan Smith and sophomore forward Jordy Murray rounded out the scoring with the Badgers’ third and fourth goals, respectively, against Tiger freshman goalie Joe Howe.

Junior goaltender Scott Gudmandson turned in the perfor-mance of the night, stopping all 35 shots he faced, including a couple early chances that could have dras-tically changed the outlook of the game. The Badgers were outshot for the night, but Gudmandson ensured that it did not matter, running his season record to 7-2-3.

After the memorable performance on Friday night, Gudmandson had a forgettable one Saturday. With an unimpressive Badger defense in front of him, the Tigers scored less than a minute into the fi rst period and ran away with the game.

After giving up another goal just 1:48 in, Wisconsin cut the lead in half with a goal from Street on a nice breakaway sequence with senior forward Michael Davies.

Disaster struck later in the period when Colorado College added two more goals in a span of nine seconds,

running the lead to 4-1 and prompt-ing UW head coach Mike Eaves to pull Gudmandson and replace him with fellow junior Brett Bennett.

The Badgers turned up the offensive pressure in an attempt to come back, but each time they appeared to grab some momentum, the Tigers responded.

Street closed the gap to 6-4 with just over two minutes left in the game, and Davies added a goal with 1.4 seconds left to make it 6-5, but it was too little too late, as the game ended on the ensuing face off, mark-ing the fi rst time all year the Badgers lost a game in which they scored four or more goals.

Although the second half of league play is just beginning, the weekend brought signifi cant chang-es to the WCHA’s look. The Badgers entered the weekend third in the conference with a chance to make ground on league leader Denver, who was idle this week. But after splitting the series with the Tigers, Wisconsin lost ground in the title race because Minnesota-Duluth swept Minnesota State and moved into fi rst place with 25 points. The Badgers now fi nd themselves in a tie for fourth with St. Cloud State with 20 points.

—uwbadgers.com contributed to this report.

Junior goalie Scott Gudmandson shut out CC Friday, but was then yanked early Saturday night after allowing four goals.

Sophomore forward Jordy Murray scored one of Wisconsin’s four goals Friday to help down the Tigers.

DANNY MARCHEWKA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

DANNY MARCHEWKA/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO

Page 20: The Daily Cardinal - Spring Welcome Issue 2010

sports

Columnist’s note: Last year at this time, this space was used to highlight Wisconsin head coach Bret Bielema’s responsibility for his team’s troubling season. In light of his performance this year, it is only fair that the following is written.

I t’s interesting what one night can do to perceptions.

The evening before the Champs Sports Bowl, Bret Bielema was the head coach of a program that just barely pulled up from a downward trend and struggled to beat good opponents. After the game he held the reins of a 10-win

squad most have pegged for the top 10 next year.

This season wasn’t supposed to be special. The Badgers were young and coming off two years in which they fell badly below expectations. Instead they ran roughshod for 55 minutes against No. 15 Miami, before letting it get close at the end.

What stood out this year, besides the way lesser known play-ers stepped up on both sides of the ball, was a change in the way Bielema did business. He carried himself in a more cordial way and was more at ease in dealing with the media both during the week and after games.

The air of standoffishness, which has been ever-present dur-ing most of his press confer-ences, was lifted this year. Last season, a number of post-loss pressers opened with the phrase “the team most responsible for Wisconsin losing was Wisconsin” (a sentiment that denies credit to an opponent). This year Bielema made sure to give credit to every adversary his team faced and praised the Camp Randall fans even on days when the student section did not fill until late in the first quarter.

Are these changes the result of last season’s trying campaign? Perhaps, but whatever changes he made, they worked. Bielema deserves recognition for the way his team turned around its fortunes and for closing out the season on such a high note.

Wisconsin came into the sea-son replacing more than half its offensive line, seven defen-sive starters and one of the top rushers in school history, along with breaking in a new starter at quarterback for the third straight year. Early on the team knocked off two “rising” opponents in Minnesota and Michigan State, and later bounced back from a two-game losing streak to fin-ish the regular season on a 4-1 run, including revenge against the Michigan squad that ignited a dismal four-game slide last year.

Entering bowl season, critics chirped that Bielema could not win the big game. The Badgers were 9-3 but had not defeated a conference foe with a winning record.

Beating the Hurricanes was the

l20 Spring Welcome Issue 2010 dailycardinal.com/sports

Wisconsin splits season series with Ohio StateBy Nick SchmittTHE DAILY CARDINAL

It was easy for Ohio State and its fans to blame the 22-point loss to the Badgers in late December on the absence of junior guard/forward and Player of the Year hopeful Evan Turner. But Saturday night, with the roles reversed due to Wisconsin was without junior forward Jon Leuer, the Badgers could not pull out a victory,

For the Buckeyes, Turner’s presence made an immediate impact. He scored six of Ohio State’s first nine points and fin-ished the night with 15 points in 26 minutes on 7-of-13 shooting. And after only a brief lead in

the first half, the Badgers found themselves playing catch-up on way to the 60-51 defeat.

Looking back on the Dec. 31 game at the Kohl Center against the Buckeyes, it was, unknowingly at the time, the perfect pre-test for the team to compensate for the unavailability of Leuer. He played only four minutes in the first half after committing two early fouls, but the play of senior guard Trevon Hughes and sophomore guard Jordan Taylor picked up the slack.

“We play as a team, and we know that Jon is one of our big guys in the post, but we have other guys that can fill his shoes,” Hughes said about playing without Leuer after the game on Dec. 31. “That’s what we did; we did it as a committee

and everybody that came in knew it was going to be a battle out there with [Dallas] Lauderdale.”

They weren’t so lucky this time.It wasn’t Lauderdale giving

Wisconsin fits though; it was the versatility of Ohio State’s guards. Junior David Lighty scored a team high 18 points on 7-of-10 shoot-ing and played all 40 minutes, and sophomore William Buford scored seven points and pulled down 12 rebounds.

The platoon of freshman Mike Bruesewitz and redshirt freshman Jared Berggren helped the Badgers stay competitive down low, but it was not discrepancy in the post game that cost Wisconsin the

Bielema overcomes low expectations, earns redemption in bowl win

basketball page 18

Men’s Basketball

RECAPBEN BREINERboom goes the breinamite

After the game he held the reins of a 10-win squad

most have pegged for the top 10 next year.

Bielema deserves recogni-tion for the way his team turned around its fortunes

and for closing out the season on such a high note.

bielema page 17